Saturday, November 14, 2009

6 Ways for Students to Publish Their Writing Online

In the course of a school year, most teachers will have students produce written content that they think should be shared with other readers. Other times teachers create writing projects with the goal of having students share their work publicly. The web offers many ways to publish written work, the following are six of my favorite free options.

Google Docs and Zoho Writer are the probably the simplest tools for publishing written work to the web. In both cases you can create and share all of your works without leaving the program. Google Docs allows to publish your documents as a webpage. You can then email url or post the url on your blog or website. Zoho Writer provides an extra option which generates an embed code for your documents. Using the embed code will allow people to read your documents without having to leave your blog or website. By the way, if you're not familiar with Zoho Writer check out the video included in this post.

Scribd and DocStoc are similar services that can best be described as YouTube for documents. You cannot create documents within either service rather you have to upload documents created with your preferred word processing program. Both services accept all of the common Microsoft formats, Open Office and Neo Office formats, and PDFs. Once you've uploaded your document it will be assigned a url and given an embed code. You can use the embed code to feature your documents on your blog or website. You can see how I've used DocStoc in the past by checking out this post.

If your students do any projects involving newsletter or magazine creation, you owe to them to check out Yudu and Issuu. Both services allow users to turn their static documents into page-turning online documents. To use the services simply upload your documents and select the visual effects that you want your documents to have. With out any special skills, your students' work can take on a very polished, professional look that they will want to show-off. You can embed the finished products into your blog or website. To see an embeded Yudu publication visit this post. To see a stand-alone Yudu document, please click here.

5 comments:

Mary-Ann said...

Great information as always. DocStoc and Yudu were new to me. Thanks for including them. Another that you might want to try is Posterous.com. It's absolutely the easiest way to publish online and no account is needed. You just send an email to post@posterous.com and in a nano second they reply with the link.

Megan Black said...

Teen Ink is another great source for students to publish both their writing and their art work.
http://teenink.com/

Essays said...

Hi,
Thanks for making my job easier. You have posted the worth reading info on time. I thank Mary too for sharing a good link here which is really very easy to use

lgfnet said...

Hey there

Great post! Two others I love challenge kids to write narrative which can be converted into media-based products (eg voki - http://www.voki.com/ and voicethread - http://voicethread.com/).

pirategirl said...

This stuff is so cool, but Virginia Beach students are blocked from those sites. Nice, huh?