So this harkens back to the “butterfly” post from a couple of days ago and hopefully extends the thinking even further in terms of what happens when we read online and how blogging plays a role in developing a sophistication in reading interactions. And, of course, what this all means for our kids.

The Illinois Mathematics and Science Academy has put out a “Full Circle” Resource Kit about Web 2.0 subtitled “a new practical resource for digital searching, evaluation and ethical use.” (Free subscription required.) It’s got articles by some familiar names, Joyce Valenza, Doug Johnson and others, and I’ve only gotten to a small slice of it. But I was drawn into a podcast interview with Mary McNabb of Learning Guage because of the way she made clear some of the issues we need to attend to regarding students reading online.

There’s no doubt that my own reading skills and habits have changed drastically since I started consuming so much more online content. And the biggest difference is that I am more of an active reader online than when reading in print. And for me, the biggest reason my reading has changed is because of blogging. I now read with an intent to write, and my writing (or blogging) is an attempt to synthesize and connect ideas, not simply summarize or paraphrase what I’ve been reading (if I even get to that.) I have many memories when I was teaching my Honors Expository Comp kids of their frustrations not with the writing…they all could do that pretty well…but the reading and the connecting. They found it so hard to take information from disparate sources and connect them some way into a coherent few paragraphs. And I would argue it was because, like so many other things we ask them to do in school, it was a contrived exercise. Pick a topic (abortion) create a thesis (keep it legal), find support, blah, blah, blah.

In this bloggy world, however, if you’re reading and writing regularly about something that you are truly passionate about, that synthesis becomes almost second nature. You are always making connections and writing your own narrative, as McNabb says:

…reading online requires synthesis of multiple perspectives and multiple information resources. We have to create our own narrative. And in a book the author creates a narrative for us and connects information and synthesizes through explanation. And we do that in our heads now when we are reading online.

But are our students doing that, and are our teachers helping them do that? They should, because hypertext offers a different structure that changes the reading process.

It changes the reading path. And the kinds of things that we do when we are reading hypertext are different from when we read a narrative print. And as a result, some students may encounter that it requires more mental energy to focus on creating a personal rhetorical structure while they are reading. It requires engagement in critical analysis of information.

And it also requires that teachers be able to assess their online reading skills differently from offline. And one suggestion she has is to use blogs not only as reflective writing spaces that support those critical reading skills but also as metoring spaces for watching it happen:

…you could sign up parents or reading tutors from the community to come in and blog with kids on more of an individualized basis or small group so that there is that feedback and monitoring of asking kids comprehension questions and seeing if they are really comprehending. And having somebody read the same thing the kids are reading to make sure that kids are actually understanding.

So here’s the deal:

FACT: Students are and will be doing more reading in hypertext environments.
FACT: Reading in hypertext environments requires different literacies than in print environments.
FACT: Teachers need to teach their students how to read effectively in hypertext environments.
FACT: In order to teach these literacies effectively, teachers must also model their use.
CONCLUSION: Teachers should be reading and writing online (blogging).

If only it was that easy, right?

(“hypertext 3-D” photo by Kathryn Cramer)
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