Friday, October 20, 2006
How can an electronic blog format be used to facilitate professional collegiality as we conduct our individual action research projects?
I just spent the last couple of hours working on a PowerPoint silent "movie" that shows some samples from a journal that Tanya wanted me to share with you. I still don't have all of the bugs worked out yet (some of the pictures I took in Mac's Photo Booth came out reversed; others did not), but maybe I can share the results with you on Thursday afternoon when we meet to discuss journling options. I came up with an essential question related to our blog journaling efforts: How can an electronic blog format be used to facilitate professional collegiality as we conduct our individual action research projects? The answer is ours to construct and evolve as an action research community as we go forward together.
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2 comments:
Thank you Madeleine. I am looking forward to the E-Bolt session. I know that you will be able to transfer your expertise in the area of journaling and writing about action research to this new medium.
From http://www.learningcircuits.org
/2003/dec2003/kaplan.htm
Headshift founder Lee Bryant writes about the high degree of interconnection between bloggers (a standard feature of a Weblog is a list of other Weblogs that the person reads), which spreads ideas and discoveries rapidly. Bryant says that blogging has shown that free software can “succeed where million-dollar software has often failed--to engage people in collaboration, knowledge sharing, and debate.”
Network World Fusion says that business blogs can “increase employee communication and knowledge, save time and resources, and build reputation and confidence.”
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