In-class work Tuesday January
27
- Go to
the class blog 320community.blogspot.com
and identify your group-mates’ comments for this week. Find
and read both comments. You’ll be getting to know each other as
people AND as readers. So look closely at what each person has said about
her/himself and at each
person’s insights on blog reading. Pull up one of the blogs you
looked at in order to briefly show a feature of interest.
- What
kind of “eyes” or “lenses” do your group-mates
have that you did not use in your own reading? What did they see that you
did not see? Make a note of it; this stretches your reading
protocols—expands your ability to “see” the interface.
- Share
your lists of technological goals and desires. Make a master list for
the instructor.
- Go
to each other’s practice blogs and discuss briefly what kinds of
tinkering you’ve done.
(about 20 minutes)
- CREATING
COMMUNITY MECHANICALLY. You’re all going to position yourselves as
writers and readers (that is, as
post authors/writers and
commenters/followers):
- COMMENTS
i. Go
to Settings > Comments. There are 12 decisions to make with regard to
commenting. Read through the options, discussing what each may mean in terms of
forming community and noting any questions. Now begin testing out each option
to see how it works. You may wish to work in pairs or threes—but do share
insights with larger group. If you haven’t already, you’ll need to
create a new posting so that your group-mates can comment.
GOALS:
--EACH BLOGGER GETS COMMENTS FROM
ALL GROUP MEMBERS
--EACH GROUP MEMBER UNDERSTANDS
THOROGHLY THE COMMENT OPTIONS AND IMPLICATIONS
FOR COMMUNITY
BUILDING.
- FOLLOWERS
i. Place
the Followers gadget on your practice blog. Have group mates sign up as
followers.
- BLOGROLL
i. Place the blogroll gadget on
your practice blog. This week you’ll practice adding a couple of blogs to
the roll. (Remember this is practice still—you can and should be
picky about what goes on the roll when you go live.
- Make
notes in your journals for your own benefit.
(about 40 minutes)
- All of
you have ideas for your public or “real” blog—but the
majority needs to work on sharpening focus. As with academic writing,
focus makes for more interesting writing and more compelling and ingenious
research. It sometimes helps to imagine what kinds of research
you’re going to have to do to feed your blog. So. . . together
make a list of what might count as “research” for your various
topic. Examples: interviewing, taking pictures, searching for or
creating images or film-clips, reading academic articles, reading in the
blogosphere, blogs on similar issues, categorizing and defining (e.g.,
beer-making processes, locations of homeless shelters, recent or
historical films made into books, varieties of tagging, names of services
agencies, specific technological arts). In short, where are the hunting
grounds where you’ll find food for your blog?
GOAL: A group-created list of what
counts as “research.” (I’ll compile and distribute so that
you can test out applicability to your project.)
(about 15 minutes)
Hand in at the end of the period: technology lists and research
lists.