Comments on Seven Days: How would teachers interact (and react) to your students' discussions about you onlineTypePad2010-10-09T09:58:10ZEwan McIntoshhttps://edu.blogs.com/edublogs/tag:typepad.com,2003:https://edu.blogs.com/edublogs/2010/10/seven-days-how-would-teachers-interact-and-react-to-your-students-discussions-about-you-online/comments/atom.xml/nasza klasa commented on 'Seven Days: How would teachers interact (and react) to your students' discussions about you online'tag:typepad.com,2003:6a00d83451f00f69e2013488241047970c2010-10-12T20:15:10Z2010-10-12T20:15:10Znasza klasahttp://naszaklasablog.comTrue - I think it would be a lot easier for bunch of people to tell what they feel online....<p>True - I think it would be a lot easier for bunch of people to tell what they feel online. Well, let's face it - people are more open in the web.</p>chris commented on 'Seven Days: How would teachers interact (and react) to your students' discussions about you online'tag:typepad.com,2003:6a00d83451f00f69e20133f4f29a31970b2010-10-09T13:08:44Z2010-10-09T13:08:44Zchrishttp://blethers.blogspot.comI think it would be exciting - and could do so much to improve performance. It'd get over the silence...<p>I think it would be exciting - and could do so much to improve performance. It'd get over the silence when you ask a student if you've made something clear - often they're not willing to come right out with it and tell you you're as clear as mud, but might well spill the beans online.</p>