I finally decided to jump in and give Schoology a try. I’ve been intrigued by its Facebook-like interface and its services like assignment creating, dropbox, discussions, blogging and gradebook ever since I first came across it at the TSETC conference last month.

This is what my home page looks like. I can’t show the course home page due to students’ full names being listed.  You can see the assignments and due dates on the right-hand side and different ‘places’ on the left-hand side.

I introduced it to my 6th graders this week. The first assignment we tried, after creating an account with an access code (no email required!) was a discussion question: “What is your favorite kind of poem and why?” We are in the middle of a poetry unit that their homeroom teacher and myself are teaching, so the question was relevant to the unit.

Their responses were on topic, thoughtful and one student even wrote, “This is cool.”  We had experience with commenting, so it was probably familiar for them, but what made it even  more familiar was the format. It looks just like a newsfeed on Facebook, so they picked up how it worked with little direction.

Today they logged in again to access our first assignment: making a Voki that reads a poem they wrote. I easily added the assignment to our course page and included a link to Voki. The students then copy/pasted their Voki embed code into the comment area of the assignment.

I can see using Schoology to teach blogging with my students. They have never blogged before, so the ability to get them started in a “walled garden” is really exciting.

A few features that I love:

  • as an administrator you can edit student user permissions like private messaging
  • built-in gradebook that automatically populates with students who ‘join’ your course
  • no need for student email addresses
  • user interface

How I introduced it to my students:

  1. Guided students to the registration page.
  2. Wrote access code on the board so students could automatically enroll in my course.
  3. Had students choose an avatar for their profile.
  4. Guided students to the course home page to find the discussion question.
  5. Gave students time to answer the question and read each other’s answers.

That took 45 minutes.

The second day the students navigated the site much more easily and I foresee it getting easier and easier.

4 Comments

  1. Matt Arguello

    Reply

    I'm going to have to take a look at Schoology. It sounds very similar to Edmodo which I've been using with multiple classes for a while now. Either way, your "walled garden" comment is right on. These are good tools to practice digital citizenship with students while not fully exposing them to an open web.

  2. Reply

    Yes, it's probably similar to Edmodo. My students love how much it looks like Facebook, which minimizes the learning curve. I'm excited about exploring our mini-walled garden.

  3. Reply

    I use the social network Schoology site in my Emerging Technologies high school class. It is a very realistic GUI to Facebook and gives the students a relevant and realistic environment to learn about proper and safe netiquette in a social network, when Facebook is filtered my district.

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