I hope we can combine together the ideas of Blog and News Letter. The major items of the Blog in a given period will become the content for the Newsletter, and as Dr. Wayne has mentioned, it will talk for the WE community among those who are not active in WE site and not a frequent visitor of our blog.
In the Blog and newsletter we may find place for corporate advertisements that have deliverance to our mission. It can be advertisements about events, ODL courses, publications, public awareness campaigns etc etc
Hi friends,
http://failblog.org/ - images of concepts that did not succeed as popularly intendedThese blogs run on a theme and usually stick with it. The blogs that are identified by a specific author will occassionally veer off into something different or personal, but the author tends to stick with a certain theme.
http://photoshopdisasters.blogspot.com/ - commercially presented images that were poorly proofed
http://lovelylisting.com/ - bizarre and unusual properties on the market
http://notalwaysright.com/ - recounts of hillarious, ridiculous, and strange retail and service encounters with customers
http://jnorad.blogspot.com/ - about paper model design, based on the author's models of a famous Valve video game world
http://blog.stephenhorlander.com/about/ - about user interface design based on the author's experience with several famous software packages.
http://blog.mozilla.com/faaborg/ - one of a collection of blogs sponsored by MozillaAnd then there are newsletters. These are a way of keeping the interested public aware of official goings on, and opinions. They can highlight internal blog articles or communications that reinforce organisation ideals. The blog concept can reciprocate by taking newsletter stories and engaging the public with them. Newsletters help keep people informed and aware of the organisational identity.
http://armylive.dodlive.mil/index.php/bout/ - Anil's US Army example
http://www.wow.com/ - used to be more clearly a collection of hired bloggers, but now appears to resemble more of a web-magazine
Have the people who have already created accounts agreed to receive
Jesse wrote:
> I think a newsletter would be a fantastic idea for WE.
> Contrary to the way the mail list works, it could be automatically
> sent via MW to all registered emails, keeping members connected.
> (We do have a lot of people that register but never come back,
> don't we?). There could be a preference that can be unchecked
> to stop sending the newsletter.
that sort of email? I mean, they're not having come back is already a
sign of disinterest, so while it's not my decision to make, I'd be
reluctant to subscribe them to a newsletter under those circumstances.
Besides, do we want to have a newsletter newsletter, or would we want
to consider having a blog as a newsletter, so that news would be sent
out on that channel whenever it arose, rather than trying to fill X
number of pages every month or quarter or what have you?
One of the thoughts here has been that we can support more than one
> The blog thing, I believe, would require some analysis on what we
> want out of it, and then how to organise it. What would blogging
> do for us? Which of the above blogging sectors do we fit into?
> (Probably sponsored, informative) How much blog content do we
> want to have, ideally? What blog topics are integral to presenting
> a cohesive, professional blog umbrella to the public? Do we allow
> just anyone to blog, or restrict it to author/subject/ability approvals?
blog for more than one purpose. For example, I'm very excited about
the idea of becoming the home of Terra Incognita, which consists of a
month guest post with concomitant discussion in the comments. The
goal was to to have each post be high quality, and one that would stir
a lot of conversation.
But that's just one. Another one could be a blog where there would be
a very low threshold for WikiEducators to sign up to post, and
moderators would have a set of guidelines to prevent posts that are
inflammatory or off topic, but otherwise be hands off. A similar
model would be to let people tag their own posts on their own blogs
with "wikieducator" and let those all be displayed together.
Then a third could be a blog where posts come from certain people
(Wayne, Jim, etc.?) on a relatively well scheduled basis, and this
would be the newsletter.
If we make a variety of resources available, it will be interesting to
see what people will do with them. Sort of like WE itself. :-)
The newsletter should definitely be edited. But in my opinion it
> I do think there is a difference between the "freedom of speech"
> issue, and the "appropriateness" issue brought up by Anil's US
> Army example. It is definitely ideal to edit for appropriateness,
> and I do think the newsletter should be edited for its adherence to
> WE's ideals, but I believe that blogging should be open to opinion,
> nevertheless containing an opinion disclaimer.
would be nice to have at least one outlet that isn't, or if it is
edited is very gentle about it.
-=Steve=-
Good, that's a reasonable approach.
Wayne wrote:
<< Agree we need to be very careful with mass-email which can arguably
and justifiably be labelled as WE spam. I would suggest implementing
an option for new users to subscribe to a news / letter magazine. We
can consider a once off notification to WE account holders regarding
the option to subscribe to the news letter once this option has been
implemented for new account holders. However -- this would need to be
an affirmative action to subscribe rather than a default that everyone
gets the newsletter unless they opt out. >>
Valerie edited the workgroup charter to have us continue to oversee
<< Hopefully there will be more people than Wayne, Jim posting -- we
should also include posts from Council members, workgroup leaders,
featured teachers etc. This model would need some sort of editorial
team to oversee alignment with community values etc. >>
whatever blogs come out of this process. That's okay with me, at
least as a starting point.
Very good, so then it seems our workgroup should refine the approach
<< We definitely need an outlet that isn't edited --- we just need a
clear communication / disclaimer that the posts are the opinions of
the individuals writing them. >>
of having three blogs:
1. Terra Incognita if possible, or if not then a sort of "Nova Terra
Incognita".
2. An official newsletter blog, the contents of which are also
periodically released in paper format.
3. An open blog where WikiEducators can easily add posts and there's
light-handed moderation.
-=Steve=-
Agree that anything you do should have an easy opt in opt out option
Don't forget RSS either - most blogs generate RSS (a list of recent
submissions) anyway and this can form the basis of a newsletter too. Google
homepage, many email readers today all support RSS subscription.
The real difference between the blog and newsletter in terms of content is
that usually a blog is collaborative, self building, and up to date whereas
a Newsletter is usually composed by somebody and thus requires greater
effort (someone collates all the info and sends it out) and has some time
lag . However, Newsletter's can be targeted better, as marketing tool and
direct to people but that in-its-self is a double edge sword, as you have to
maintain your audience.
I suspect for the first couple of communications you want a targeted
newsletter. As you catch up with the information you want to deliver then
moving to a more automated communication, RSS and possibly email
subscription would be the way. I would say go straight to the blog and
automated option.
For offline people, this changes. The advantage of an up to the minute
automated information service such a blog will never be met. For these
people an offline version of a newsletter is required. However, even an
offline newsletter can be generated from online content though some
automated process - the creation of the content may not be the issue - but
how they receive it could (which impacts frequency). As well as traditional
post, you can also deliver a newsletter as an Acrobat file which can be
downloaded and printed (in 100000's if neeed) in the destination country,
they could even do this from a web page. So the web can still be used to
facilitate offline users.
I was wondering if there is a better way to do without duplicating the effort and increasing the number of people who may contribute.
Does our Wikieducator software allow us to present RSS content and then send that out as another RSS in some way – I can do this via Drupal, another open source content software, I m wondering if the wiki can too ? This is all about using open standards (RSS and XML in this case) to link and reuse data.
I am thinking that we could use something like delicious, stumble upon or similar to capture an article from a blog and by adding a tag (like WikiEducator) have that appear on our site and thus newsletter . The main article itself will still be hosted on the contributors main blog site, but a plug/leader will appear on our site and sent out as part of our newsletter – a true mashup.
By the way I don’t want this holding up any implementation, we should be able to do something like this post anything set up for now (if the technology supports it)
Ray
From: wikied...@googlegroups.com
[mailto:wikied...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Randy Fisher
Sent: 11 November 2009 13:43
To: wikied...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [WikiEducator] Re: WE blog or newsletter?
Hi Everyone,
This may also get faster after the server migration since we can teach
the RSS "fetcher" to cache results rather than getting a fresh copy of
the feed on each page hit.
But optimization is still good.
If the coach does the pushups,
The athlete will not get stronger
Community Empowerment:
www.scn.org/cmp/
WikiEducator
http://www.wikieducator.org/User:Philbartle
Join our discusssion forum
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Community_Strengthening
I'd be OK with contributing to a WE blog.
I do link to Wikieducator pages from my blogs sometimes but mostly in
a nod nod wink wink kind of way (Monty Python skit) to my readers and
students i.e. I'm preaching to some choir or using the shop talk of
some tribe.
What I posted for a flagship WE blog might have a different flavor,
however I could see contributing a future post, or maybe one or two
past ones would be useful. I could see how the blog shapes up and
look for something fitting.
Below one I just posted. Clearly it's technical and aimed at a
specific audience:
http://mybizmo.blogspot.com/2009/11/more-curriculum-writing.html
On the other hand, perhaps your WE blog should just have this flavor
or random content, a so-called cross-section, formatted by
wikieducators as blog posts pointing into this content.
That would give casual browsers, thinking about jumping in, a sense of
what the waters are like.
In that sense, I could see this linked post being one such random sample.
Thanks for your work in providing this valuable world service.
Kirby Urner
User:KirbyUrner
Institute for Science, Engineering & Public Policy (board), isepp.org
Python Software Foundation (voting member), python.org
The way I've approached this is using planetplanet software.
You can see how I use it here.
http://superuser.com.au/planettalo
I believe many free culture communities also use planetplanet, Wikimedia have a planet too.
http://en.planet.wikimedia.org/
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Hi Chris, Valery and Kirby
The planetplanet software is great and well aligned with our open community values :-)
I don't see any issues with installing this as a WikiEducator subdomain. This will be great way for aggregating blog-feeds about WikiEducator from our community members.
The only issue is going to be one of timing - -we're currently migrating WikiEducator over to the Athabasca servers --- however, our test installation is not yet performing at the levels we would like :-(. We're in the process of putting more metal into the cluster so that our site will perform at the levels we expect from WikiEducator.
If possible, We'd prefer to avoid double work with two installations of the planet software. We would appreciate a couple of weeks breathing space to get this operational -- Is that OK?
An open question -- with regards to the WikiEducator blog itself, we've been throwing around a few ideas. What do you think about the WikiEducator blog being more wiki-like -- in other words where the WE blogging team collaborate openly on the post in the wiki way -- a blog post which everyone can edit. We'll need to take a look at available extensions and think about RSS feeds, comments etc. Personally, I think this would be rather COOL. Thoughts?
Cheers
Wayne
I think the more we work together to edit things the better...It not only helps clarify ideas, it gives us all practice on the best ways to do it collaboratively and cordially. Joyce McKnight, SUNY Empire State College
kirby urner <kirby...@gmail.com>
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bcc Joyce McKnight/SUNY
Subject Re: [WikiEducator] Re: WE blog or newsletter?
I think the more we work together to edit things the better...It not only helps clarify ideas, it gives us all practice on the best ways to do it collaboratively and cordially. Joyce McKnight, SUNY Empire State College
kirby urner <kirby...@gmail.com>
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Subject Re: [WikiEducator] Re: WE blog or newsletter?
I'll post a link to that post in the Math Forum when it appears (this is a moderated list), so you can better see how I promote Wikieducator to my audience. In the meantime, I have this short essay on Constructivism that might interest a few here (Ed Cherlin for example):
http://mathforum.org/kb/thread.jspa?threadID=2019948&tstart=0
I appreciate your work and encourage you to keep doing it.
Our "global university" (GU) thanks you -- I use GU interchangebly with Fuller's moniker Spaceship Earth (SE), as a way of looking at the whole planet.
Kirby Urner
Portland, Oregon
Jesse
On 03/11/2009 18:18, valerie wrote:
> Did anything ever come of earlier suggestions that there be a
> WikiEducator blog with multiple contributors or a collaboratively
> written newsletter?
>
> I poked around and didn't find much.
>
> old discussions
> http://wikieducator.org/WikiEducator:NewsLetter
>
> Write an article for a magazine/newsletter styled publication
> describing the wiki concept and how people can become involved
> http://wikieducator.org/WikiMaster/WikiApprentice_Level_1
>
> I'm having my students work collaboratively in small groups to come up
> with a WikiEducator promotion.
> http://www.wikieducator.org/DeAnza_College/CIS2/Fall_2009#Final_Projects
>
> Naturally, their first question - Where is the WikiEducator
> newsletter? Umm, I'll get back to you on that...
>
> Is there a good answer to this question?
>
> ..Valerie
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Wikilog looks like a nice wiki-centric solution.
..Valerie
--
Edward Mokurai (默雷/धर्ममेघशब्दगर्ज/دھرممیگھشبدگر ج) Cherlin
Silent Thunder is my name, and Children are my nation.
The Cosmos is my dwelling place, the Truth my destination.
http://www.earthtreasury.org/