bloggerCon Shanghai!
Fantastic! Our delegation of 24 teachers from San Francisco's Galileo Academy of Science
and Technology will be inShanghai for the city's
first bloggerCon. So I do get to participate in a second bloggerCon after all! This should help us find some active eduBloggers
in Shanghai for that week, Only $298?
Not that I want to shop at WalMart, but at this price, there'll be lines for Linux. Manila's camirilla - Staff development day
It has to be fun. All the other stuff is nice: significant, socially
conscious, politically progressive, intellectually challenging, emotionally
engaging, artistically pleasing; but for the long haul, professional development has to be fun. Like playing
music or gardening or cooking or exercising or arguing. If it gets too
serious or dull, the pension and the summers are the only things that
keep you hanging in. Pensions and summers aren't worth it, even at my age. We've been having fun. A camirilla has formed around Manila adoption at Gal, gathering haphazardly in the cluttered and unswept library office. Folks appear and disappear - Brodie, Moffett, Heskin, Arquillos, Banos, Barrios, Chiu / Grinell (dynamic principal and secretary duo), O'Brien, Barrett, Zimberhoff, Carter, Matsumoto, Marshall, Machtay, McDowell, Ring, King, Mar-Beshears, Gill (shy), Aramendia, Olea (who's threatening Craig's List with local competition), et al. They camp out in the research nook or the main room during a classroom-denied prep period, borrow or return a video, read the Chronicle or a magazine, grade papers, make a cup of coffee, store a lunch in the refrigerator, look for a book, ask to order something, search for a hiding colleague, or wonder again how to include a picture in a web page. At some point, we laugh. We're collaborating on the No Laugh Left Behind act. (The White House is contributing.) It is the most overlooked aspect of professional development. Gathering historical stones from database streams1941 March 28 - British writer Virgina Woolf drowns herself in a river near her home in Sussex, England at age 59.
The above gathered from ABC_CLIO 'This day in history' and supplemented with a Nettrekker search.
Slack jawed Republicans have us considering emigration
In Georgia, "an amendment adopted without objection added 'piercing' to
the list of things that may not be done to female genitals... Amendment
sponsor Rep. Bill Heath, R-Bremen, was slack-jawed when told after the
vote that some adults seek the piercings." And the list goes ever on
and on. Of course, male piercings go unmentioned. As least in the legislation. Right, right, right!"... Rarely do we focus on the eponymous role of blogs: keeping a log of useful resources on the web. I mostly read blogs that point me to good stuff on the web... On the other hand, centralized directories of resources mostly suck, because you lose the personal element... I don't care if something simply exists. I want to know that someone I trust created it or likes it. Period. Similarly, jacking into another school's feed of useful 'learning objects' is of limited use to me, if I don't know anyone at the school, in person or through their blogs. Encouraging teachers to subscribe to a decontextualized list of learning object feeds or aggregating a bunch of learning object feeds is not in my opinion good practice, and it does not reflect proper analysis of why weblogs are useful and successful." See also. [Tuttle SVC]Amen, amen, amen. Local, local, local. My school is filled with subjects - real, harried, struggling, and mostly offline people and they object to learning objects. They even object to being fed, unless the sandwich is really good. Our bandwidth-narrowed, ISP-exhausting domain of weblogs is gradually developing into a digital hallway, a place where friendly partners in teaching (and learning) run into each other check things out, at its best an informal blog commons. Occasionally a couple of folks will talk for a while in the ethereal hallways. If it gets really good, though, they generally move into a real room (often the library office) and talk f2f about what they used their website for. They share ideas, practices, student work, teaching tales, weekend plans, and sandwiches. Good teaching is good teachers, the relationships and conversations between them within a real physical community, not good feeds. Unless we're talking about shared sandwiches. Putting anger in context
From Christina Cantrill on the NWP list serve: "Reading ... a really important book. Technology and Social Inclusion: Rethinking the Digital Divide by Mark Warschauer .." "An impassioned, thoughtful, and unique analysis of the digital divide
that incorporates evidence from affluent and poor nations. Warschauer shows
that social context, far more than hardware, shapes access to new technologies." - Larry Cuban, School of Education, Stanford University
'When angry count four; when very angry, ...' don't blog - Mark Twain
Re: yesterday's post about RSS feeds being left behind. Jenny's right. (See comment.)
Apologies extended. She's done more than enough to highlight the
efforts of educational bloggers everywhere. (Hey - she's even got the
badge on her site.) Mean-spirited of me to nitpick a pointer to a
school out of our socio-economic experience of the digital world. I'd
spent the day banging my head and keyboard against the increasing
limitations of our server and bandwidth circumstances, talked to three
teachers who'd gotten lay off notices, and finished the 'relatively
good day' planning a summer program with a new Arts and Tech non-profit
partner of BAWP's. We started the session with the lead teacher referencing the murder of a former student. Should have skipped the blog and found my own beer. Star 'crossed' trailers
"Monty Python's film The Life of Brian is to return to US cinemas next
month following the success of The Passion of the Christ." [BBC] Does the circus solemnize weddings? The No RSS Feed Left Behind act
So I hear there are wealthy private schools with recently
available RSS feeds. I'm impressed. The ones below come from an urban
public school in a state that has forgotten how to fund public
education. The domain, active for 9 months, has over 30 sites with RSS
feeds. Who do you have to know to get a beer around here? China edBlogger 2004?
Well, that's probably overstating it, but there's a chance for some interesting trans-Pacific connections with our school's impending delegation to Shanghai. So, kind readers, please pass on this link to any and all bloggers / educators who might want to meet with us face-to-face in the city by the sea. Dear Educators, Webloggers & Friends in China: Galileo Academy of Science and Technology is exploring a "sister school" relationship with Donghui Normal high school in Shanghai, PRC. A large delegation of 22 teachers and staff will be visiting Shanghai city, various schools and surrounding areas. The visit will happen from April 10 to April 17. We are very interested in meeting with teachers, administrators, students, parents and other people interested in education. We have a special interest in the use of technology for teaching and learning. If you know of any individuals, groups or schools who might be interested in meeting with us, send email by clicking here: Traditional:
Simplified: Sheikh Yassin's assassination
BBC Reynolds opines: "...The overall lesson to be drawn from these events is that
there is really no prospect for peace, that the roadmap has been rolled
up and that another 20 years of war is the most likely scenario..."
Consulting the tome / tomb in Spring
In the 60's, we called them 'trots.' They got us through Latin which
got us extraordinary scores on the SAT verbals which got us the college
acceptances of Spring. To Cyril Connolly in the 20's they were 'cribs.'
A consultative reading to weaken his conclusion. (Emphasis
added.) "Cribs were of two kinds: pretentious
and extremely free translations in verse, to which access was easy, but
whose help was negligible; and word-for-word translations published by
Kelly and Bohn, which employed such a remote and extraordinary
vocabulary that anyone consultiing them was still wholesomely far from
appreciating the quality of the original. But in my time there appeared
another kind of translation. This was the Loeb classical library, which
printed a prose verssion of the Latin beside the original, and which,
won as a prize by one's fagmaster, was available, by unwritten law, for
the use of his slaves. From that moment one could no longer (I was in
my tenth year of learning Latin) spend hours over an author without
discovering what he was like. And the knowledge was poison. Several of
us began to understand what we read, and to find out that we had been
learning by heart the mature,
ironical, sensual and irreligious opinions of a middle-aged Roman, one
whose chief counsel to youth was to drink and make love to the best of
its ability, as these were activities unsuitable to a middle age given
over to worldly-wise meditations and good talk. Afterwards there
remained only an equal oblivion for the virtuous and the wicked in the
unconsulted tomb." - The Rock Pool, 1936
Update on the down dates
Issac comments that he described the PRC blog outage several times in the past week or so. The issue's pressing at Galileo since we're finalizing the Shanghai trip and are hoping to hook up with some Chinese educational bloggers while we're there. Have PRC blogs been Shanghai-ed?At Galileo, we just finalized sending a sister school delegation to Shanghai during spring break. And now there's news of a possible Chinese blog shut down. [Pointed at by Dave Winer.] Details can be found at blogBus and several other sites. eBN members may remember our early connections with Chinese educational bloggers: Our delegation will be in China, at a very tech savvy school, during bloggerCon II. At bloggerCon I, Galileo students participated via IM in a question and answer session on blogs and politics. Hmm - does bC II have a session planned with an international focus? |
...with all the fervour of a man enraptured, but he still knows that he is playing. " - Johan Huizinga
Discussion |