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Always good to see Bloglines getting some good ink in big media, such as “All The News You Choose — On One Page” in Business Week. While I’m not sure the story gets it quite right about RSS, there are a couple of choice quotes that resonated:
“We believe the world is moving from mass media to ‘my media,”‘ says Daniel L. Rosensweig, chief operating officer at Yahoo Inc., which last month began testing feeds to the 20 million subscribers of its My Yahoo service.
I like that way of putting it…I still can’t believe the effects that RSS has had on my personal consumption of information. It is truly amazing.
The biggies claim their brands will insulate them against upstarts. Says Catherine Levene, vice-president for product, business development, and strategy at New York Times Digital: “We think people will still come to [our site] for our editorial judgment.”
Um…why? The only reason I go to the New York Times site these days is if something in my feed piques my interest.
So is surfing dead? Not quite. While RSS is good for getting updates, it can’t do research or comparison shopping. And although it’s simpler to use than earlier technology, it remains more complicated than a browser.
More complicated than a browser? Maybe just a little. But the time you save makes the really, really tiny learning bump absolutely worth it. And I mean blogs are cool, but RSS is, well, cooler than cool.
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Wall Street Journal on K-12 Classroom Blogs
Here’s the bad news about today’s Journal article…the title: “Classroom Use of Web Logs Raises Concerns”
Here’s the good news…the article paints a much better picture of classroom blogging than the title suggests.
The WSJ is subscription only, so here are some snippets that I found interesting and relevant:
But the school’s experience highlights some of the issues that educators and parents face as blogs — simple Web sites that follow a diary-like format — gain entry into the nation’s classrooms. While most agree on blogs’ value for promoting student expression, critical thinking and exchange, there’s no consensus on the amount of control over access and content that educators should exercise. As blogging spreads, it could revive debates over student expression similar to those that have cropped up around school newspapers.
No doubt about this. And I don’t think it’s going to be an easy or necessarily smooth road. But I also don’t think there is any stopping this read/write Web into the classroom train. This is more about expression; this is about enhancing student learning in ways that we could not do in the past. While I may at times bemoan the slow pace of adoption of these tools, it’s actually probably a good thing in this respect…we need to prove that the constructivist, collaborative potential of the read/write Web is all it’s cracked up to be.
The use of blogs in schools remains limited but is growing, as scattered programs piloted by tech-savvy educators generate buzz and followers. Teachers are attracted to blogging for some of the same reasons blog use has exploded among techies, political commentators and would-be pundits.
The buzz is growing for blogs in general, and there are more teachers in the fold. That hopefully means that we’re going to push out in even more creative directions.
“What we want to see is a Web log where a teacher has final control, acts as a filter for any postings or comments,” says Janey Mayo, technology coordinator for Harford County Public Schools. “We’re trying to be very cautious with this because we’re working with kids.” School administrators also want to see further research on whether blogging has educational value at the elementary-school level, but so far haven’t found any.
This really does sum up where we are right now. Teachers see great academic potential, administrators see great risks, and we’re all in limbo waiting for the scholars to opine. The good news is, more and more of them are. The bad news is the results are mixed.
Other educators say, even pending such a fix, that blogging can be used responsibly in classrooms. They argue that kids surf the Web outside of school already, so teaching them to deal with inappropriate comments on blogs is important.
I’ve said this before, but the biggest challenge with all of this is that our kids are doing more than our teachers when it comes to mining and using the Internet, and we don’t have enough role models for them to teach the best ways to use it. That’s the scary part…the digital natives vs. digital immigrants issue.
“It’s worth taking that risk” of being exposed to inappropriate content on the Web, says Anne Davis, an information systems training specialist at Georgia State University and former elementary school teacher.
You go Anne!
All in all, I think the article is an accurate assessment of the current situation. There’s much left to be done…
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