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31-Day Comment Challenge: Wrap-up
Day 29: Write a Commenting Guide for Students
Many of the challenge participants work in the education world (’edubloggers’ if you will) so a student-related topic is very appropriate. The challenge focuses on the creation of an age-appropriate guide for commenters. I don’t think I’m the target audience of this challenge, but I’d still like to get something out of it!
When I think about my blog and the comments/commenters here, a guide, per se, doesn’t seem as appropriate. Perhaps a statement: “Be nice—everyone has a mother, and they may be one, too.” At the end of the day, as much as I want to build community, trust, and openness on this blog through comments and conversations, I do want people to have respect for one another and remember that you may not really know who you are addressing (or offending) with a statement.
Day 30: How Can You Use What You’ve Learned about Commenting to Change Your Teaching Practices?
Again, this one doesn’t speak to me as directly as many others, but I’d like to twist it a bit to do so. What have I learned about commenting that has changed my blogging?
I have continued to ask questions at the end of my posts, and I very much enjoy it when you all share your answers. I think the biggest thing, though, is the questioning of my own practice of replying to comments personally in email instead of publicly on the blog. That has changed how I reply here on this blog, and has also changed how I comment elsewhere - whether I expect a direct reply or not, etc.
Day 31: What Were Your Top 5 Lessons from the Comment Challenge?
Oh, gosh! I don’t know that I have 5! I’ll try:
I guess that’s it! Thanks for following along with me - I hope you got something out of it as well.
Did you participate in any of the challenges? If you were going to evaluate your commenting strategy, how would you classify it? What would you change about it?