How to Create a Blogger Blog

Follow this link to download a printer-friendly version of these directions.

  1. Go to Google: www.google.com.
  2. Click on “Sign in.”
  3. If you already have a Google account, sign in now. If you don’t, create one now. Please note that if you create an account, you will also need access to your email account to retrieve the confirmation information.
  4. Once you have signed in, follow the “My Account” link in the upper right-hand corner of the screen, and locate the Blogger option.
  5. Follow the “Blogger” link, and sign in to Blogger using your Google password.
  6. Click on the blue “Create Your Blog Now” button. Follow the steps to create your blog: decide what to call your blog, how to find it, and what it will look like. You can always change your blog’s design later, but you cannot change the URL, so please select carefully.
  7. To post a message or to publish your work, click on the “New Post” link. To change the look of your blog, click on the “Customize” link.
  8. Once you are on the “Customize” page, find the "Template" tab. From the “Template” tab, you can add page elements (like a video bar, links to your favorite websites, pictures, inspirational quotations, lists of favorite authors, etc.), you can rearrange these elements on your page (even after you’ve added content), you can change your font colors and sizes, and you can select a new template.

Every new post you create shows up in the center of your blog space. That might be okay with you, especially if you've set your blog to accept a large number of posts, but if you want to simplify your layout--and the navigation--consider setting your blog to show zero posts (go to "Customize," then "Settings," then "Formatting"--then set the "Show" number to zero posts), and then create and link to separate pages in your blog (as I've done with our "Creating Your Blog" and "About the Presenters" portions of this blog).

  1. Click on the "New Post" option located in the upper right-hand corner of the screen.
  2. Title your post. Put something--anything--in the post body.
  3. Once you have completed your post, click on the orange "PUBLISH POST" button at the bottom left of the screen. (You can always go back to revise your post--even after you publish it.)
  4. Select "Edit Posts" tab, and click on the “View” link next to the post you just created.
  5. Once you arrive at the view of page you just posted, right click once in the browser's address line, and from the resultant pop-up menu, select "Copy."
  6. To place the link, go to "Customize," and edit one of the links page elements you have already created, or create a new links section by clicking on the "Adding a Page Element" links and adding "Links List."
  7. Title your Links List (Assignments, Essays, Problem Sets--whatever you need), paste the URL you copied in step five, and title the "New Site Name" (Assignment #425, Persuasive Essay, Calculating Sine Problem Set, etc.).
  8. Click on the orange "Save Changes" button, and then view your blog to see what you've created. Note: you can also link to another website (blog, image, video feed, etc.) by starting again at step six and pasting that link into the URL space.

The “Settings” tab in the “Customize” screen grants access to several important options. From the “Settings” menu, you can select “Comments” to decide who can leave comments on your blog and whether you want to protect against spamming by selecting the “Word Verification” option. The “Permissions” screen allows you to determine who can read your blog, to invite readers/contributors, and to grant administrative status. Play. Have fun. You can always change your mind later. Just do not hit the big, blue “Delete This Blog” button on the “Basic” page!


Please consider adding your blog to the RWP Blogs on Parade by emailing Tracy with your URL. We will link to your blog from the RWP website.

Please also feel absolutely free to email me with questions and with suggestions for improving these directions. Thanks!

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Laura and Ed

Bloging Resources

1-Question Interview--Index Page
ProBlogger Darren Rowse "asked 14 of {his} favorite bloggers what they’d do differently if they were starting their blog again today. Their responses were varied" and are available on the index page linked above.

50 Great Widgets for Your Blog
Helpful, fun, and/or sexy additions for your blog: painter-a-day service, world timeclocks, etc.

Blogs in Plain English
A YouTube video demystifying blogs.

CreativeCommons
Free artwork, music, and tools.

Drupal
"Drupal is a free software package that allows an individual or a community of users to easily publish, manage and organize a wide variety of content on a website. Tens of thousands of people and organizations have used Drupal to power scores of different web sites, including community web portals, discussion sites, corporate web sites, intranet applications, personal web sites or blogs, aficionado sites, E-commerce applications, resource directories, and social networking sites."

EduBlogs
This free blogging platform bills itself as "the largest education community on the Internet."

Habits of Highly Successful Bloggers
ProBlogger Darren Rowse lists his readers' responses to the one-question interview he posed to "14 of {his} favorite bloggers."

Feed2Podcast.com
The dotcom makes me think that this product probably isn't free, but it enables bloggers to have people listen to their blogs rather than just reading them. It may prove useful.

MediaMaster
MM bills itself as "the best music experience on the web for accessing, listening and sharing your music collection." It allows you to upload your music and/or radio station to your blog so that you or others may listen to selections from your collection anywhere you can get an Internet collection. This one looks like a feebie to me.

Support Blogging
As "an opportunity for students, teachers, administrators, parents, and others to help promote an understanding of the benefits of educational blogging," SupportBlogging! is an invaluable resource offering linked lists of blogs, bloggers, and blog builders.

Warlick, David F. Classroom Blogging. 2nd ed. Thousand Oaks, California: Corwin Press, 2007.
This book provides practical, step-by-step advice for teachers about using free web services to establish blogs, wikis and podcasts for classroom use. Warlick’s Blog, Exactly 2 Cents Worth, http://davidwarlick.com/2cents/ has many links to help teachers explore reading/writing/multimedia publishing options available on the web. Among these is http://supportblogging.com/Educational+Blogging

Why Let Our Students Blog?
A YouTube Video by Teachers for Teachers

WordPress
Free blogs and blogging help.