Weblogg-ed Team

The Weblogg-ed Team is the collective byline behind our editorial coverage. We write about teaching, learning, and the institutions around them as technology and students keep moving faster than the systems built to serve them. Our work covers classroom practice, edtech and AI tools, online learning, homeschooling, digital literacy, and higher education, written for teachers, school leaders, parents, and lifelong learners who want clearer thinking than the press releases provide.
Teaching & Pedagogy

Kids Owning the Learning

A visit to Wooranna Park Primary School in Melbourne shows what it looks like when students truly drive the learning—from designing their own spaces and curriculum themes to running a parliament-style school government and creating original performances, all grounded in inquiry and a belief that learning is nonlinear and self-directed.

Weblogg-ed Team · · 2 min read
Online Learning

The “Added Value of Networking”

From the “Building the Compelling Case Department” comes this piece in the Harvard Graduate School of Education magazine Ed. about how students are already learning in social networks, why their emerging skills matter, and why educators must engage these tools themselves to help students use them to their full learning potential.

Weblogg-ed Team · · 3 min read
Digital Literacy & Media

Those Who Publish Set the Agenda

A study on the “participation divide” in digital content creation suggests that online publishing remains unequally distributed by social background, creating a two-tiered system of contributors and consumers—and underscoring the need to teach these technologies in all classrooms, especially in lower socio-economic areas.

Weblogg-ed Team · · 2 min read
EdTech & Classroom Tools

Get. Off. Paper.

We keep finding ourselves using less and less paper in our lives, yet schools and workshops are still overflowing with it. If our students’ futures won’t be paper-based, we need to start doing as much as we can to get off paper now.

Weblogg-ed Team · · 2 min read
EdTech & Classroom Tools

Filter Fun

We’ve been running into school Internet filters more than usual lately, and the problem seems to be getting worse instead of better. When teachers and even administrators can’t reach basic tools like Gmail, Google Docs, YouTube, or Wikipedia, it not only leaves students unprepared for the unfiltered world they actually live in, it also undermines the professionalism of educators. The only way students and teachers will ever really master the Web is by being allowed to use it.

Weblogg-ed Team · · 1 min read
EdTech & Classroom Tools

What We Hate About Twitter

We’ve liked Twitter since we first started playing with it last year, but there are some things that are really starting to annoy us about these 140-character “conversations” that we’re carrying on there, server issues notwithstanding.

Weblogg-ed Team · · 2 min read
Professional Development

I’ll Be in the Hallway

Reflecting on unconference-style gatherings at BloggerCon and EduBloggerCon, and questioning whether we’re really moving beyond tools and vendors toward deeper conversations about how learning, networks, teaching, and schools are changing.

Weblogg-ed Team · · 3 min read
Digital Literacy & Media

Blogging Ethics

Reflections on Jeff Jarvis’s take on blogging ethics, the power of linking and quoting, and how these practices shape journalism, teaching, and expectations for non-fiction writing.

Weblogg-ed Team · · 1 min read