Our challenge today was figuring out how to respond to a nice comment here is my DLO
I am a student at St Francis of Assisi Catholic School. I am in Year 7 and my teacher is Miss Henderson. This is a place where I will be able to share my learning with you. Please note....some work won't be edited - just my first drafts, so there may be some surface errors. I would love your feedback, comments, thoughts and ideas.
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Monday 28 December 2020
Commenting like a boss!
Here it is!
What do you think a good response to a mean comment could look like?
1 comment:
To support my learning I ask you to comment as follows:
1. Something positive - Begin with a greeting. Talk about something you like about what I have shared.
2. Thoughtful - A comment that will mean something to me to let me know you read/watched or listened to what I had to say. - use any language.
3. Something helpful - Give me some ideas for next time or ask me a question.
Encourage me to make another post
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Hey Jasper,
ReplyDeleteI’m Daniel from the SLJ Blog commenting team. I’m looking forward to seeing all your amazing blog posts and I hope you’re enjoying your summer.
Thank you for your comment, This is a lovely reply to both Benjamin and all of us on the SLJ team.
You’ve asked a really interesting and important question.
Firstly you might like to know we have a look at all the comments on the blogs and that any unnecessary hurtful comments are reviewed and can be removed. If there is anything you’ve seen you can let us know and we’ll respond to it.
I think a good response when getting a mean comment in person or online in any situation is to remember to watch how we reply. No matter what someone does to us we are still responsible for our own actions and should still be kind and respectful.
Sometimes the comment might seem harsh because it’s offering us quite candid criticism which it is important to hear and maybe they might have a point even if they didn’t say it too nicely, so it’s important online, when you’re not sure of their tone to assume people are speaking with the best intent.
If things get really nasty and you’ve tried being respectful and understanding then the best bet is to ignore them and then let a responsible adult know, on this blog that could also include us, the SLJ team and your teacher or school.
Great question Jasper.
Keep up the good work Jasper,
See you later in the comments,
Daniel