This is my last post for this class and its seems appropriate to look back on what I have got out of the experience:
- I’ve become an avatar four or five times over.
- I’ve strutted my stuff in second life (and walked into a lot of walls in the process).
- I’ve seen elearning from the outside and elearning from the inside.
- I’ve seen what’s been, what’s here, what’s to come and what’s really out there!
- I’ve caught the del.icio.us bug and even learned how to type del.icio.us without having to concentrate really hard
- I’ve sold JuJu beans (but I haven’t mastered typing JuJu with making at least one mistake - practice makes perfect!)
- I’ve had more emails in my home email than my work email (and that’s saying something!)
- I’ve posted essays in a pubic space (now that is nerve wracking!)
- I’ve seen the good the bad and the ugly of elearning
- I’ve felt old (there’s nothing like new technology to do that!)
Am I still an elearning skeptic? Sure, but I’m a much more enthusiastic, informed, experienced and even a little evangelical skeptic. A little skepticism is a healthy thing I think.
Thanks Anne, the JuJus and all my EMT 1 coleagues, its been fun.
The elearning skeptic.
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As I have got into blogging one question has crossed my mind on a number of occasions: does the time that you do a post have any impact on how many people read it? Jake Luciani took a particular interest in this very question has undertaken an analsyis to determine the answer. According to Luciani’s analysis Tues - Friday between 10am - 2pm (Pacific Standard Time) are the “hot times” for popular blog posts. This means that to maximise the readership of my posts I need to post between 3am and 7am Wednesday to Saturday (thanks to www.timeconverter.com for your assistance with this calculation). I’m not totally convinced that the added readership justifies staying up all night for, but it is yet another thing to consider when operating in the global commnity that is web 2.0. You can read the full analysis on Luciani’s site, 3rd rail.
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Like most new bloggers I scoured the Internet for inspiration when I started and, like most new bloggers, I soon learned that there are an awfully large number of blogs out there (up to 70 million depending on your source!). As new bloggers we want our blog to be well designed and attact visitors who want to stay. The best way to do this is to learn from others who have achieved these goals. So how do you spot one of these?? The simplest way is to locate blogs that have recieved one or more awards, so here are a few award winning sites from the recent 2008 Bloggie awards you might want to visit to get the creative juices flowing:
(1) Dooce. This site won the ‘best designed weblog’ award. Dooce also picked up the overall award for 2008 too. An interesting piece of trivia about this weblog is that its creator, Heather B Armstong was the first person to be fired from her job for writing ‘unsavoury’ thing about her employer on her blog. To this day anyone who is fired because of something they said on their weblog is said to have been ‘dooced‘ (true story, check the link!)
(2) loobylu.com. This site won the ‘lifetime achievement’ award for Australia/New Zealand. Its a great blog that is very visually engaging and gives some great ideas for using blogs to display artwork.
(3) PostSecret. This site was nominated for the “Weblog of the year award”. Its a little confronting in places but I was totally hooked by the presentation and content.
(4) Gizmodo Australia. A great Australian site about gadgets and gizmos.
Happy browsing.
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Deep down I’m a bit of a nerd and this means I really like to know what makes something tick. If you are like me and ever wondered what happens when you create a blog post, like this one, I found a great resource from Wired Magazine (I told you I was a nerd) which gives you a great visual representation of all the stuff going on below the surface when you make a post. This is also a great eye-opener if you want to know why your IT department is being so uncooperative in relation to your efforts to introduce blogging into your workplace as it outlines some of the Internet ‘nasties’ lurking out there waiting for an unsuspection post to come along!
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An interesting new article appeared in the New York Times today called, “In Web World of 24/7 stress, writers blog till they drop“. It seems that there is a ugly side to blogging developing which the New York Times refers to as the “digital-era sweatshop” where countless bloggers grind away producing posting as their main source of income. The article quotes one such blogger, Mark Buchanan, who “sleeps about five hours a night and often does not have time to eat proper meals”.
I’m not for a second saying that using blogs in education will kill our students but its always easy to get caught up in the positives of new technology without looking at the whole picture. I know, however, from personal experience that it is easy to get caught up in your blog and I think that the above article is an obvious pause for thought for bloggers around the world and for those of us who are encouraging others to engage with this technology. As with all things moderation is the key.
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