Seems appropriate that a first blog post should be about the reasons I'm choosing to blog in the first place.
Until I read sections from
Will Richardson's Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts, and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classroooms, I thought of blogs more a place for personal (and narcissistic?) publication than a tool for learning. What can a blog do that a content management system like
WebCT or Blackboard can't? We've been using WebCT for 2 years in our writing project (
Red Clay Writing Project) to upload/download documents, create discussion boards, among other useful classroom applications. What I'm just now recognizing is how contained that information is, how inaccessible it is for others outside of our project (i.e., other writing project sites). This dawned on me when we shared our WebCT structure (reading lists, agendas, etc.) with others in our
GA writing projects state network. It literally took someone showing someone at an annual meeting for that information to move beyond its original site.
Blogs, on the other hand, seem ready to open up access to that information, and technologies like RSS feeds (Real Simple Syndication) and Aggregators (i.e.,
Bloglines) are examples of ways teachers and students can collect (and subscribe to) specific content/webpages relevant to their interests. Yeah, I’m just now getting that.
A simple example: Red Clay is currently brainstorming for its next youth writing camp. We recently viewed
Red Cedar Writing Project’s plans for their youth tech camp on one of their wikis, plans that would likely remain hidden behind firewalls and passwords in a content management structure like WebCT.
A question that still lingers for me concerns copyright issues, especially for posting published academic readings. I appreciated
Brian Lamb’s article Dr. Mashup: or, Why Educators Should Learn to Stop Worrying and Love the Remix, which touches on copyright issues (notably the practice of designating
Creative Commons licensing) and raises good questions about issues in education involving creativity and intellectual property.