Small things excite me in the land of teaching.
But I was so glad that they found importance in my comments. Not that I feel like I'm being overly narcissistic (am I...?!), but I am their teacher and I do want them to continue on to college with some sort of remembrance of how to improve their writing. So it was comforting and encouraging to watch them pore over their papers with inquisitive and (somewhat) happy faces.
What I have really been enjoying on a larger scale is how technology has changed the whole idea of not just students' writing techniques, but my grading as well. I have mentioned the sites we use and discussed other research technology in other postings, but one thing that ties in nicely with the idea of teacher commentary is the idea of VoiceThread. My students and I are very lucky that our district has purchased use of this technology, and I think I would love to be able to commentate and even grade their papers (or a sample of a few student papers) for their review. While it is public and might not be good for individual grades, wouldn't it be a cool thing to be a student and watch a teacher grade even an example paper "live?" They are always inquiring about specific grading procedures, point values, how I got 15 instead of 18 for a certain part of the rubric...etc. Therefore, I think it could be so useful to try something like this, maybe go through three different samples (excellent, average, poor) and do a little demonstration on what I'm looking for while having a rubric side by side. I, myself, at this point in my life, would STILL love to see something like this...a colleague or former teacher, even...make their way through an essay. I seem to remember an audio-grading that we got from a professor at Pitt, and that was pretty neat, but the use of VoiceThread could take it to a whole new level.