Archive for the “rss” Category

In The Technology of Reading and Writing…: Why RSS is crucial for a Blogging Classroom, Parry suggests need for a reliable means of facilitating peer-student readership, one that guides students beyond clicking and scanning of classmates’ blogs, beyond simply looking up and hitching up with one’s friends and favorites, and that propels them towards “reading the others’ work critically and providing constructive contributions” (Why it Matters for Student Writing, ¶ 3). If students receive RSS feeds providing headlines and synopses of posts from all peers’ blogs, Parry argues, students can scan every post and determine for themselves which they ought to read more closely.

In writing classes I’ve taught, I’ve observed how students at liberty to do so will gravitate to their friends and favorites, with whom they may even sit in class, and on whose blogs they may willingly sustain exchanges beyond one-off comments at assigned intervals. Although active feeds which conceal author’s names may encourage students to explore posts on blogs other than those of their best buddies, they will still need interest, motivation, and purpose to carry them beyond scanning attractive posts, commenting haphazardly, and then nipping back to links, feeds, and channels already familiar and favorable to them. I still wonder to what extent student peers can stimulate and satisfy each others’ intellectual curiosity through obligatory online interactions.

Parry suggests also that we use RSS feeds to channel comments as well as synopsize posts. Indeed we can, without so much difficulty that students cannot do so on their own blogs. For a relatively simple recipe for doing so on Blogger blogs, please see:smile-e (c)

Recent Comment Feed on Your Blog
(pab’s potpourri, February 1, 2008).

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This post is a follow-on to Food for Thought, e-Cobblers, a question about learning objects, or “fungible digital parts,” an import from pab’s potpourri (2007.07.30).

With reference to Susan Metos (2005), who defines a learning object as a “digital resource” that “include[s] or link[s] to (1) a learning objective, (2) a practice activity, and (3) an assessment,” Brian Lamb explains the demise of learning objects:

With only the noblest of intentions, proponents of learning objects (and I was one of them) went at the problem of promoting reuse by establishing an arduous and complex set of interoperability standards and then working to persuade others to adopt those standards. Educators were asked to take on complex and ill-defined tasks in exchange for an uncertain payoff. Not surprisingly, almost all of them passed.

(Lamb, 2007, Dr. Mashup…)

References

Lamb, Brian. (2007). Dr. Mashup; or, Why Educators Should Learn to Stop Worrying and Love the Remix. EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 42, no. 4 (July/August 2007), 12-25. Retrieved September 3, 2007, from http://www.educause.edu/apps/er/erm07/erm0740.asp?bhcp=1

Metos, Susan E. (2005). Learning Objects: A Rose by Any Other Name…. EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 40, no. 4 (July/August 2005), 12–13. Retrieved September 3, 2007, from http://www.educause.edu/er/erm05/erm05410.asp

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My mailboxes get filled by discussion board and mailing list messages faster than I can read them. Yesterday, I hastily reviewed and disposed of hundreds and hundreds of messages, in just two pre-filtered mailboxes, culling only a few which struck my fancy. Even though I’d searched for, and previewed items in one of those mailboxes containing my favorite term, “collaborati,” and had sorted messages in the other mailbox for posts by members whom I know and respect to preview, on threads that had already caught my interest; it was a long, tiring, unsatisfying, and largely unproductive processSo I’m planning to start making use of RSS feeds and aggregation technology to create several focused collections of collections of related source materials that I enjoy reading, and find useful (or potentially so) in my work. One collection will combine SCoPE scheduled seminar feeds, with Online Facilitation mailing list posts that usually go into the two mailboxes that I emptied yesterday.

http://scope.lidc.sfu.ca/rss/file.php/12/177/forum/132/rss.xml
http://rss.groups.yahoo.com/group/onlinefacilitation/rss

The question is, where and how to put these together, for my own ease of reading and uptake. Elgg…, Safari…? Hmm. Perhaps that depends on where I will be most likely to view and digest them in a deliberate and timely fashion.

This entry linked to <a href=”http://theltdproject.wikispaces.com/RSS notes”>Wikispaces page (RSS notes)</a>

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