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Christina Geuther

How One Teacher's Angry Blog Sparked a Viral Classroom - 1 views

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    Kayla Webley of Time (2011 Feb 18) wrote on the effect of a teacher's angry blog about students. While she tried to hide her full name and not directly identify with the school district, someone made the connection with her picture. Currently the teacher is suspended, but is pursuing a legal resolution.
Antonio Barrera

Anthologize - Blog to Online Book? - 0 views

shared by Antonio Barrera on 08 Feb 11 - Cached
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    I find this interesting because it begins the notion of transforming an online content source to a book, and moreover it is built around a social application with the potential for multiple authors. Essentially, Anthologize allows the authors of the blog to take specific posts and generate them into a book. By the way, the developers of this are from the Center for History and New Media, see the next post!
Dessi Gradinarova-Kirova

Social Informatics - International Blog - 1 views

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    OK my favorite thing on this blog is the Norwegian translated term for Social Informatics- "Samfunnsinformatikk". It really made me aware of just how international and not so narrow this field is. I can get caught up in a real American world view and this little tidbit kind of opened my eyes a bit and made me realize that there will be great international sources too!
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    I was interested in the concept of Bildung, which incorporates many different aspects of knowledge gathering and personal growth such as moral development, generosity, scientific thinking etc. It is relevant to me, as an educator.
Laurie A.

blogs are old media...? - 0 views

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    Young people are leaving blogs to run twitter and fb pages.... unique page views for blogger are down domestically (although up internationally). Tumblr & wordpress use remains consistent. Does anyone agree that blogger still feels like it's stuck in 2003 with its look, feel and usage?
Andrew Luck

Evgeny Morozov's blog : Net Effect - 0 views

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    In many ways, this is just one more pundit (and we know how much attention they can get by being contrary), but he does provide a counterpoint to much of the enthusiasm over the democratizing effects of social media.
Lydia Redding

Social Informatics - 0 views

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    This site is the best I've found so far in my search process. It provides tons of links to Social Informatics Highlights, Blogs, Associations, Sources, and Related Fields.
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    There is a lot of information on this site and it is very helpful.
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    i've come across this site before in an earlier iteration. I still am up in the air about the perspective and resources. I'll have to give it a more careful read.
Naomi House

Steve Sawyer's List of Helpful Links to socio-technical and social informatics resources - 1 views

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    Blogs, associations, technical websites and basically Steve Sawyer's list of most helpful websites on this topic. What I find most useful is that having been sort of a pioneer in SI having his recommendations makes me feel that these sites are more useful than ones I might find on my own or at least a good place to start.
Judy Panagakos

Libraries and Transliteracy - 0 views

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    A group effort sharing information about all literacies (digital literacy, media literacy, information literacy, visual literacy, 21st century literacies, transliteracies ) with special focus on all libraries.
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    Just realized this is missing "geospatial literacy" which is one of the areas I am interested in, but this looks like a great site. Similar to what we are doing on the topic of social informatics via diigo.
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    I like that there is so much interest in Transliteracy! We have to include Henry Jenkin's blog as well: http://www.henryjenkins.org/
beestel

E-books benefit Society - 0 views

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    I read this article detailing why e-books are better for the environment, cheaper, easier for eyes to read, convenient... My question is if anyone has an e-book reader and how they like it. I'm considering one of my own.
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    I received a Kindle as a gift, but I have not started using it. I guess I am very old-fashioned and I like the actual experience of having a paper copy in my hands. Occasionally I read text online, but it is nice to feel the paper in your hands. I agree that it is getting very important for all of us to start thinking about how much paper we use and how to be environmentally smarter. Also, I have to say that The Kindle is gentle on the eyes, much more than one would think.
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    I have very mixed feelings about ebooks. I am really excited that we will cover this for a week in this course. I just got an ipad from my parents as a going away gift, and I know it will be an essential tool in obtaining english language books overseas. They would have been too expensive otherwise (even my local ILL is 6Euros and up, depending where the book is). For me, there's no question that it is most efficient and economical distribution channel to get books. That said, I am wary of obsolescence, and very upset that most of these devices prohibit sharing. I am starting to get frustrated with the limits and controls on Apple products - it is my understanding that the Kindle is probably the most prohibitive though. Sharing great books with friends or through the library creates community and is better for the environment than plugging in more devices that use electricity. It's an interesting thing to play around with. The sony ereader isn't praised enough, I think. This device is the most open and programmable, and the most enabled to work with public libraries for elending. I ultimately did not get the ereader since I wanted a device with internet browsing so I could log in and do some of my classwork.
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    I have a Kindle and I LOVE it. I will admit that I hate that I cannot share my books with my friends as this is something that I used to do all the time. The Nook has that capability and there are rumors that Amazon will push through software that will allow this capability and I really hope they do. The Kindle has done amazing things for my book shelves and I think my husband is thrilled that we no longer have to keep adding. It is a dedicated ereader so it is limited to what I can do compared to an iPad but when I just want to read something the Kindle (or ereader) cannot be beat. While you are reading the iPad you are looking a computer monitor and that really strains my eyes. The Kindle is exactly like reading a book and there is no eye strain. Plus, the Kindle is a lot lighter than a book so it is much more comfortable to hold for long periods of time. It is great when I travel because I have a ton of books loaded onto my Kindle and I am set to go and I do not have to worry about their weight or carrying them around. Dessi mentioned that she liked having the old-fashioned paper in her hands and I thought I was going to be that way as well but I got over it real quick! I will admit that I do not like it for my school text books because I like to be able to visually see my books and I place notes all over the place with post-its and an old-fashioned book is just better for me in that respect.
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    They all seem to have advantages and disadvantges... I agree one problem with the ipad is the screen - it's better than a typical computer screen, but not as easy on the eyes as a dedicated e-reader. I am still attached to the physical experience of reading and writing, but that's cool that has really worked for Heather. One of the reasons why it might have not worked for scholarly reading is that the tools still seem limited for engaged reading, marking up texts, highlighting, etc. I am hoping there will be good apps for this with the ipad (i just got it and haven't had a chance to look). Beestel, you have to read through the details of each device to find out what is best for you and your reading needs.
Anna Lisa Raya Rivera

Working Constantly, Thanks to Technology - NYTimes.com - 1 views

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    The writer of the article I just posted pollled NYT readers for how they use technology to manage the many directions their lives are pulled every day. So far, there are 69 comments...
Dessi Gradinarova-Kirova

Skyping Reading Tutor Blog - 0 views

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    I am getting interested in online mediated learning and apparently a lot of tutoring is being conducted via online video/chat programs, such as Skype.
Naomi House

The Center for Network-Centric Cognition and Information Fusion - 0 views

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    I discovered this center from reading this blogger ( http://www.michaeltyworth.com/blog/social-informatics/ ) Sounds pretty neat though I can't pretend to understand most of this I did like the approach - "We have all this incredible amount of information, but we don't have knowledge. What we're trying to do is focus on the problem of transforming energy-sensor and other information-into knowledge."
Naomi House

I, reporters - 0 views

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    Interesting article from The Economist about applying distributive creativity and group piecework to journalism. "Under the rubric "My Boss Is a Robot" they are testing whether it is possible to draw on the sort of distributed creativity that the internet has made possible-and faddish-to perform the equivalent of journalistic piecework. To start with, the group has chosen to bash out the kind of article with which Babbage is all too familiar: a write-up of a newly released scientific research paper. Rather than assign the task as a whole to a single person, their system will try to tease apart and outsource different elements of analysis and production."
Anna Lisa Raya Rivera

A Life on the Streets, Captured on Twitter - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    This is an interesting use of a social media tool to better connect four homeless men with the "community around them," to quote one of the people involved in this project. There are interesting comments, everything from someone calling Mr. Wiggins' followers "compassionless voyeurs," to others praising the fact that these men are given a voice that might one day help their plight. I think only good things can come from giving voice to people on the edges of the digital divide, but that's my opinion.
Tariyka Chaulk

Gaming in the Classroom - 1 views

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    This is Lee Sheldon's (the points professor) blog. He gives a little more insight into how he uses the points system and also provides notes and afterthoughts.
Lilia p

Online racism - 2 views

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    interesting article. I already thought a few years ago that voice on Second Life was going to alter the "game." Here is some evidence
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    This article seems both scary and revealing. We knew racism was not really about race, but fear, power, and human nature. Now we have seemed to have backed our way into proving it.
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    people often think anonymity on the internet breeds contempt. this article shows it's not that simple.
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    Y'know if the gamers assume that the female dwarves are Chinese players and they go out of their way to kill with added anti-Asian slurs that would be racist. But they are also female dwarfs. I guess these players can also express their misogynistic tendencies to boot. Nice.
Judy Panagakos

Kevin Kelly's Book - What Technology Wants - 1 views

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    Has anyone read this? I think I will have to get this book. His lecture in the early weeks stuck with me and I keep poking around on his "kk.org" site.
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    No I havent read it but am thinking of dowloading it if it is available.
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    I am really skeptical of Kevin Kelly even since we viewed that TED lecture, but I have been going to his blog weekly anyway. He had a post earlier this week about the price of e-books - he thinks they will inevitably fall to $0.99 per book and nick carr responded and tore apart his logic.
Laurie A.

Miss G.: A Case of Internet Addiction - 0 views

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    Is the internet an addiction or a passion?
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    "In general, if a pastime is not classy, those who love it are 'addicted.' Opera and poetry buffs are 'passionate.'"
Dessi Gradinarova-Kirova

Digital divide: The internet's haves and have-nots - 0 views

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    I liked the link to the pew research statistics.
Jessica McDonough

Google Says It Collects Location Data on Phones for Location Services - 1 views

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    Google says that phones need to know your location to provide services.
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