Friday, August 29, 2008

Thing 12 FD toys

I just added the code for a gadget on the blog; I tried the fd toys gadget of the "where have you been" map. It worked the first time and I was quite surprised. Not sure if I can add to it, though. I wanted to try this one so I can create a family blog and we can keep track of my niece's travels as she studies in England this semester. Hope it can work.

Blogging Workloads

Now that I have a reason to have a blog (assigned for homework) it feels more legitimate to me. And now that I have several very good blogs I use for work-related information RSS'd to me every day, I find that I have even greater respect for bloggers. I used to think it was a self-indulgent exercise, keeping a blog, and now I find I am very disappointed when a blog that I like has nothing new for the day. It's a lot of work for these good bloggers and a different sort of pressure than, say, writing for a newspaper.

We are all out there waiting in the "cloud" for great stuff; it feels more connected and personal than just reading a book or watching a commentator on TV. I guess that's the point everyone is making about web 2.0. It's just taking me a while!

Thing 11 -- Facebook

I have actually done it; I have joined the scariest part of the web 2.0 world -- a social networking site. And it is less scary in some ways, yet just as scary in others, as I thought it would be. I was happy with the controls I could put on my privacy and I found that it was easier than I thought to upload a picture of myself for the world...but within a couple of days I was contacted by people wanting to be my "friend." How did they know I was even on Facebook, I wondered? And now I am getting information on their friends (and I guess they see me as well). That is blowing my mind a little, still. I find it amazing and still somewhat intrusive to know that so-and-so is having a beer right now, especially if they are a friend of a friend. I am still an uptight Yankee at heart, I guess, and it is good for me to have these social connections broadened for me.

I joined the Library 2.0 group and already I have found some interesting stuff on it. And I have gotten completely distracted by fun apps like "flair." So there have been productive and totally non-productive aspects of Facebook for me.

But this is the best part of all; I just read that very few educators have Facebook or MySpace accounts; this is a problem if we want to be able to work with students who all do. We should know something and have tried some of these 2.0 tools, so that we can lend our opinions to our students with some kind of authority. How can I really talk about online safety if I haven't exposed myself to the risk and seen exactly how it feels to be online and whether it actually is risky?

It was the exercise I dreaded the most but it has turned out to be an excellent learning (and very real life) assignment.