Category: Current Events

  • TypePad in the Classroom

    Bud Gibson, who teaches at the University of Michigan’s Ross School of Business, writes about using TypePad in the classroom. On the three reasons why blogging is not just another technology in the classroom fad Bud writes,

     

    By design, blogging allows individuals
    to raise topics of interest and create threads of conversation without
    having to ask anyone’s permission. That was an explicit design
    consideration for this course; I wanted to know what was going on with
    students. Bulletin boards tend to be top-down and are owned by one
    person. Wikis force you to go through a social filter. Others can edit
    your pages or even delete them.

    Second, because blogging also produces XML-based feeds, it is very
    easy to aggregate all of the individual contributions in one place
    while still maintaining individual attribution.

    Third, the XML-based feeds in blogs allow me to join people and
    resources to my group vs. having to get them to join me. Note, I did
    ask permission of everyone whose feed I aggregated into our site, but
    they did not have to go through a sign-on process and explicitly
    produce content for the site. By localizing content creation, blogs
    make it possible to ask permission and get a coherent stream of content.

  • He shoots, He Scores!

    For the past month we’ve been sending Tyler to a local “supplemental educational center” so that he can top up what he learns in school with further training and challenge himself a little further. At his age (Tyler will be six in March), we really just want him to feel comfortable making mistakes in order to understand and to learn that persistence has its rewards.

    It’s a shame that we can’t get what we feel our child deserves from the public schools here. It’s mostly due to Proposition 13 which hold property taxes artificially low in California so that, on average, California spends only $3,000/child as opposed to the $10,000/child we saw in New Jersey (table). I just feel fortunate that we can afford this extra schooling as not everyone can.

    Score, a Kaplan company, runs the center and we pay a monthly fee for two, one-hour sessions a week which we can schedule at any time. The whole program is computer based and the kids put on headphones and click their way through a series of modules that test their ability and gradually make things harder if they get too many answers correct or easier if they miss too much. Assistants hover over the kids and take notes on how they’re doing and swoop in to help out any time there are any questions. The modules are 10 minutes long and after each module the child can get up and shoot a few baskets into an indoor hoop set up in the corner to get the blood moving and add some fun into the process.

    Another motivator for the kids is that for every successful module that they complete, they get moved up a path posted up on the wall and get little chits that they can trade in for prizes and toys. My colleague at work called it Chuck-e-Cheese for schooling and she’s not too far off. But the kids seem to respond and it’s helpful to have monthly graphs which chart your child’s success. It would be a little creepy if this was the way school was but for an after school program it works just fine.

    So we went in for Tyler’s one month evaluation and I have to say that we’re pleased. He generally likes it – sometimes he grumbles about going but it’s mostly because he’s into what he’s doing at the moment and doesn’t want to stop. By the time we get there, he’s all into it. He’s reading is at about the first grade level and his math is mid-first grade. The feedback from the instructors is great. They all know Tyler’s name and share all sorts of details about his learning that tell me that they are following his progress closely. I would have taken a picture of him at one of the terminals but some parents understandably freak when you post pictures of their kids on the internet.

    During the review, the staffer had to share with us a story that’s made the rounds. During one session where Tyler was learning to add, she looked over and saw that Tyler had taken off a shoe and was dangling a bare foot off his chair. When she asked him about it, Tyler said that he had run out of fingers and was using his toes!

  • One veteran of Seventies politics says goodbye to another

    Jerry Brown, former Governor of California, democratic presidential candidate, and current two term Mayor of Oakland, bids farewell to Hunter S. Thompson who inspired the style, if not spirit, of many of the bloggers of today.

    Many thanks to Ted Shelton who seems to have introduced Jerry to blogging, plugged him in and turned him on.

  • Girl’s Day

    Girl’s Day

    As we drove through Chinatown this past weekend, we saw preparations for the Chinese New Year’s celebrations. Many were carrying sprigs of cut plum blossoms which are just starting to bloom so we bought some to go with the Girl’s Day display which we set up each year around this time and keep up until the beginning of March.

    Tyler took a small plum blossom branch to school today to explain to his class about the festival and his Japanese background. Taking him to school this morning, he said he was worried that the boys in the class would make fun of a kid carrying pink flowers to show-and-tell. Later, in line waiting to go into the class, he noticed that the girls liked he flowers so he warmed up to the idea.

  • Nisenholtz counterpoint to Dan Gillmor

    The Online Journalism Review inteviews Martin Nisenholtz of NY Times Digital who is a ready counter-argument to Dan Gillmor’s call for a freeing of the archives. Until banner ad revenues outstrip the royalties they curently earn from subscription databases such as Factiva and Lexis-Nexis, there is no way they’re opening up the barn door.

    “We’re not about to give away something that the marketplace is paying a huge premium for already,” Nisenholtz told me, “unless you could get a lot more than that premium in some other way, which you can’t, believe me, there’s no way. There’s no analysis to show that Google AdWords gets you anything close to what we make on archives on the Web — never mind all the money we make on the after-market sales. It’s so ridiculous as to be laughable.

    It’s a marketplace of a few vendors serving up proprietary content on closed systems vs. a more sustainable marketplace of any and every website around the world looking to link to and reference New York’s paper of record. And what about The Long Tail?

  • Ask Jeeves launches blog on TypePad

    Ask Jeeves moved to a shiny new office tower in Oakland and launched a shiny new blog to boot!

    UPDATE: and buys online RSS reader, Bloglines.

  • BBC on blogs at school

    BBC Online writes about the use of blogs in the classroom. Thanks to Tom Watanabe over at techfutures.org for the tip.

  • Farking Google

    This one’s my favorite but there’s a whole bunch more photoshop fun over on Fark.com.

  • Andy Lark

    Ok. Last post about the NewComm conference. Andy Lark, formally a VP of Marketing at Sun, is now out on his own as a speaker, evangelist, and consultant for firms that are looking for someone to help them with their blogging strategy.

    Shameless plug: Andy is on TypePad on an account that he started while still at Sun. Sun has their own blogging infrastructure so when chided by Sun execs for not having his blog running on a Sun product, he shot back that what he wrote on his blog was his and he wanted to have the right to take the content (and more importantly, the domain, links, and comments) with him when if he ever left Sun.

    Andy gave an inspirational talk about the benefits of blogging for corporations, particularly those in charge of interpreting the corporate voice for the public (that would be Public Relations). The best summary of his talk that I could find (I’m sure there will be more in the coming days) was by Jeremy Wright.

    UPDATE: You can download a copy of his 82-slide presentation here.