Who I Aggregate

Who Aggregates Me (and has shared their OPML)

& on Bloglines

Education
Technology

[alterego]
autounfocus

Bill Brandon

Blog.IT
Brooklyn BloggEd
cogdogblog
Collaborative Learning
Dale Pike
David Davies
Disruptive Technology
EdBlogger Praxis
EduResources
EdTechPost
EduBlog Insights
Edu-blog News
elearningpost
elearnspace
Headshift Moments

HomoLudens
Jim Flowers
Learning Circuits
Many 2 Many
Mark Roseman
Online Learning
open-education
Seblogging

Stephen Downes

teachnology
Ten Reasons Why
Tim Lauer
SiT
Weblogg-ed
X-Plana

Internet

A Networked World
headshift moments
mamamusings
tmt, tlt
McGee's Musings
Micah Alpern

Microdoc News
Powazek
Scripting News

Other

Connectivity
Library Stuff
Mathemagenic
Open Access News
Seb's Open Research
The Shifted Librarian
Unbound Spiral


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Thursday, March 13, 2003
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Learning by doing and sharing... at age nine.

I have reflected a couple times on building communities of inventive kids. This post by Mark Szpakowski describes the kind of thing I believe could get kids hooked on learning and sharing:

I've been watching how my 9-year-old son is making use of the Lego Mindstorms community and associated sites: he's self-educating himself, making use of both books and online resources. The lego robotics forums let him see what builders all over the world are constructing, complete with digital photos of construction details. He refers to these in his own building projects, always with variations due to different parts, etc.

In the Mindstorms forums you can find dozens of kids exchanging tips and undertaking all kinds of cool projects. Makes me wish I'd had something like that when I was their age.

[Seb's Open Research]

Hey Lindon, is this the kind of thing you're interested in? Am I going over the top on this aggregating thing?


5:48:00 PM    comments   trackback

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Harvard blogs in the news.

Winer's work to establish blogging at Harvard makes Business Today.  This quote describes a situation common to all universities.

In a diverse institution such as Harvard, he said, individual schools and research centers often don't communicate well with one another.

``We wondered, can we try some new technology to break down the barriers? Blogs can be that technology,'' Palfrey said.

The project will provide blogging guidance and software to anyone with a harvard.edu e-mail address. People will be encouraged to share ideas on what is happening in their corner of the university.

When you consider the diverse research taking place, providing a platform where people can find complimentary information to help them find new ideas and products should be a goal we can all agree on.

[Jim Flowers: Blogs and Education]

 

Yep, that's the idea! Out of the bunkers boys!


3:34:43 PM    comments   trackback

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Blog resources for academics.

Marc Canter provides a link to a great compilation of blog resources for academics. 

[Jim Flowers: Blogs and Education]

Too cool! This is a GREAT list of links and is going to help me no end in my NEW JOB which I found out about today... working with tons of academics across a great big good university and flinging this blogging thing around for all it's worth!

Yay! VVVVVV Happy :o)


3:33:20 PM    comments   trackback



Nothing to do with the great civil rights leader, James Farmer, but here are some links that are:

Greensboro sit-ins
Reflections
Family (with pictures)


Stuff

About me

About incorporated
subversion





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