Category Archives: blogging

Learning By Writing – I Have a Tool for That!

I have encountered three examples in the past few weeks of using journals to learn. The first came from Ken Follett’s excellent novel, World Without End. One of the main characters is a woman who, going against the traditions of the day, becomes a doctor. As part of her own learning, she reads books of others but she also keeps her own journal where she makes notes about her patients and her methods for treating them. Since most of the books she has available to her are ancient treatises about things like humors and how sin causes disease, her notes become a practical manual for others with direct links between illness and treatment. I realize this is fictional but it is a great example of using writing to learn.

The second example came along with my cheesemaking kit. The instructions recommending keeping a cheesemaking journal to make notes about the experience.

The third example came from Southern Living magazine. In their most recent edition, they recommend that, in order to learn more about gardening, you should keep a journal with notes and diagrams.

So, there seems to be lots of agreement that journaling is a good way to learn. And, as I suggest in my title, I have a tool for that: a weblog. Now, I can hear some of you saying, so what, Karen? Are you just now figuring this out? Certainly using a blog as a personal learning journal is not a new idea amongst people like me. But, it might be a new idea for teachers. And, for those of us who work with teachers, the new idea might be how we approach them with this tool. Instead of starting with the tool, start with the instructional practice of having students reflect on their learning through writing. I think there are a fair number of teachers across the content areas who already do this. So, building on a practice they have already established, talk to them about the affordances of blogging technology to facilitate that learning.

We also owe it to them to help them figure out how they will implement this enhanced strategy using the computer resources available to them. When I was teaching language arts, my students kept reading journals. If I were doing it today, I would certainly want to use weblogs because their affordances greatly outweigh the paper/pencil journals in terms of commenting and building a community of readers. However, I would need to have pretty decent access to computers so students could write in their journals when they had something to say rather than when I got the computer lab scheduled. If getting access to computer technology made that impossible, I would probably go back to the paper/pencil journals, whose one major affordance is that they can be easily carried to class or kept in a box in the classroom. Schools continue to struggle with the access issue so it must be part of the conversation we have with teachers.

Just FYI: I am keeping my cheese journal online as part of my personal weblog in the hopes that my experiences might be useful for others who have begun to the journey to cheesemaker.

Judged by Live Journal

I keep several blogs in addition to this one.  One of them serves as the reflexive journal for my research project.  Since I wanted choices about privacy and sharing, I went with Live Journal.  I have been using it for the past year and am happy with it.  My only friend is my advisor because I started the journal as a class assignment so she needed access.  But, now my posts are completely private.

I had not posted for awhile but now that the proposal process is heating up, I wanted to record some thoughts and questions.  When I logged in, my LJ homepage informed me that I “only” have one friend.  And then helpfully provided a link to organizations where I presumably could find friends.  It was like having your mother appear at the door of room, urging you to get out and meet some people, maybe join a club or something.

But, I have LOTS of friends, I wanted to say to LJ.  And, if I don’t, it’s because I’m happy with it that way.  I don’t want to discuss model rockets or the best recipes for meatloaf…at least not here.  I actually do that other places but LJ is where I just want to tuck myself in the corner, shielding my paper from others’ views and write.  In an increasingly public world, we may need to carve out space for private thoughts in the network.  That’s what I’ve done in LJ; I just didn’t expect to be judged wanting because of that desire for privacy.

Where’s the Line?

May Heath Ledger rest in peace.   Ask not for whom the bell tolls, it tolls for thee.

I think I heard about the death of Heath Ledger on the news last evening.  Now, this evening, Larry King is covering it on CNN, and the correspondents keep condemning the blogs for spreading bad information.  After hearing it for about the fourth time, I decided to go see what the blogs were saying.

What I discovered was an article in the Huffington Post about how websites really broke this story.  Here’s the one that’s claiming to have broken the story.  So, I guess that’s what they mainstream folks are really steamed about.  The blogs beat them to it.

On blogging, communities, etc.

I was sort of surprised when I came to this blog only to discover that I haven’t posted since early June.  I have plenty of excuses; the main one is that I’ve been doing a lot of posting over at the Classroom 2.0 community at ning.com.  After years of sending my posts into cyberspace and getting little or no feedback, I posted at Classroom 2.0 and got immediate feedback.  So, that’s where I’ve been doing my work.  There are, however, things I want to write that may be of larger interest so I’m not ready to shut down this blog yet, or my personal one over at Simply Karen.

My other excuse is that I’ve been getting my church up and running with Web 2.0.  I set up the blog for them and have been trying to add audio and video in anticipation of this week’s unveiling.

Now, I’m sitting at the last keynote for Ed-Media 2007.  I spent yesterday at the conference.  There’s lots of energy among these mostly higher education folks.  But I’m struck by the fact that, in terms of technology, they are in exactly the same boat as K-12.  They get that the technology is out there, that our students are living in the world, but they haven’t figured out how to use it any better than the folks in the elementary and secondary classrooms.  I attended several presentations that discussed how to build a better portal or course management system to serve the needs of teachers and students.  I also chose two of the invited speakers.  John Cook discussed his work in the UK with Reusable Learning Objects.  And Elliot Soloway and Cathie Norris described their work with handhelds.   But the only problem is that these are still pretty tech-centered.  There weren’t any compelling reasons for a non-techie teacher to adopt the technologies.

France bans citizen journalists from reporting violence | InfoWorld | News | 2007-03-06 | By Peter Sayer, IDG News Service

France bans citizen journalists from reporting violence

From InfoWorld, an article describing the French government’s attempt to reign in citizen journalists by making it an offense for anyone to film and distribute acts of violence unless they are sanctioned journalists. So, they are trying to unblur the very blurry lines between bloggers and journalists. I think along with that law, they should prohibit these sanctioned journalists from blogging. It might be too confusing for their citizens to distinguish between the real and the possibly not-real. That’s assuming, of course, that the journalists are always reporting what’s real.

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Learning Contract Update

I will admit up front that I am procrastinating.  I *should* be doing some bibliography work for my media literacy research project.  Instead, I am doing everything else–watching Triumph of the Will, canceling my cell phone, doing laundry.  It is amazing how much I get done when I am procrastinating!  Is there some adult learning principle at work here?  What we learn we were are supposed to be learning something else?

Anyway, as part of that procrastination, I thought I would doing a learning contract update.  I have taken the first steps towards learning Final Cut Pro.  I am pretty happy with my first movie and got lots of positive feedback from the class.  This weekend, I want to dig into some of the Lewis and Clark footage I’ve got.  I’m considering doing something that combines footage from our trip with excerpts from my journal and the L&C journals.  Contrast their journey with ours.  First, though, I need to get a look at what’s there.  It’s been seven or eight years since we took the trip.  I reviewed some of the footage this summer, but need to go back through it with a “cinematographer’s” eye.

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The Problem with Filters

I am sitting in a workshop in a large school division that is really wrestling with technology.  In particular, they struggle, as many schools do, with how to provide access to their students but also how to protect them.  They have filtered anything with the word “blog.”  However, my blog doesn’t have that word in its URL so I was able to get to it and am testing out adding posts.  Hmmm…

Nine Years of Water Testing

Water Test Procedure

  1. At home, do the sodium thiosulfate test. Check kit for equipment and data sheets.
  2. At the dock, hang the thermometer out of the sun to take air temperature.
  3. Complete the front of the data sheet.
  4. Use the secchi disk to record water clarity and water depth.
  5. Use the bucket to collect a water sample. Place it on the dock, preferably out of the sun.
  6. Record air temperature and put thermometer in the bucket to test water temperature.
  7. Begin dissolved oxygen test: add the first two chemicals and then let the precipitate settle.
  8. While it’s settling, record water temperature and complete the ph test.
  9. Complete the DO test.
  10. Do the salinity test.
  11. Check all recorded data, especially tidal stage.
  12. Complete rest of form. Sign.

This is the procedure I have been following for the almost 200 water tests I have done at this same spot on Morris Creek. My data is available online. Yesterday, I attended the bi-annual recertification workshops where they review procedures and issue new equipment and chemicals. Continue reading

NEO Blogging

Normally, my location is probably of no interest to anyone reading this blog. But, this post is all about location. I am sitting on my dock, which reaches out into Morris Creek, a fresh water tidal creek along which my husband and I own a piece of property. I want to record my thoughts about the water testing I’ve been doing for almost a decade. In order to do that, I am going to use a very handy piece of technology called a NEO.

Part word processor, part micro computer, the NEO is an Alphasmart product. I normally don’t bring any technology out to this undeveloped property about 30 minutes from our home. There is no electricity or running water, just a tent with some adirondack chairs and a spectacular view. The quiet peacefulness seems to preclude sitting in front of a computer, and I can see you shaking your head over this breach of the nature/technology border.

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