Northern Voice Weblog Conference — Deadline Looms

One more week to get your speaker submissions in for Northern Voice. We had a blast last year, and judging from the submissions so far it promises to be another humdinger. You need not step forward to deliver a whole talk — you can offer to join a panel, lead a discussion, or propose a theme for Moose Camp.

Based on the experience last year, I don’t feel much urgency to get “education” or “academia” on the agenda as a stand-alone theme for its own sake (unless demand warrants). The discourse of the wider weblog community offers much to inform educators. But that doesn’t mean I don’t want to get as many of the smart voices I read in my aggregator onto the program as possible — I do, very much.

The planning has cranked up a notch, and with it my own excitement for what’s to come. I fervently hope you’ll be in the mix. Have you heard that Vancouver is a nice city? And that stuff about rain in the winter… a vile pack of lies. Do I have to beg? OK, consider me abject. Consider me pleading. I’m on my knees…

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The Thunderbird soars

Some very cool, very exciting stuff is happening at UBC’s School of Journalism.  The process is still in its early stages, but if you want to get a sense of where things are headed, check out what’s going on with its online publication The Thunderbird.  Best described in their own words:

No one has ever attempted this ever before in Vancouver: keeping tabs on what ALL the news and non-traditional media are reporting during a municipal election campaign. It’s a massive news scan – focusing just on Vancouver.

A team of 15 graduate students at UBC’s School of
Journalism are digging through tons of newsprint, hours of TV and radio news, and virtual lifetimes of online digital data. All of it.

All for you.

More civic news than you knew you wanted, probably more than you can digest. But it’s all here – from battling bloggers to dueling pundits and everything in between.

This coverage kicks anything else I’m aware of — the media environment of my local civic space just got a whole lot richer and a whole lot groovier.  One of the things that impresses me most is the prominence of the most compelling content.  I should note that this publication has been given a complete reworking over a very short period of time, and presently drips with all manner of social software rich chocolatey goodness — this is a great example of a blog that pushes the definitions of what a blog is about. Serious kudos are in order.

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We now begin our descent…

Unlike D’Arcy and his family, who chose to emphasize the festive, even wholesome appeal of Halloween, way out here our own recognitions took on a darker, uncanny cast, spiraling into a maelstrom of the senses…

home sweet home Powerful forces

A visitor manos

bend reality to the will light trick

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The power of positive narcissism does it again

Checking my referrer stats I was sent to the new (to me) weblog The Open Classroom (great title), which pointed me toward this nugget from the blog of proximal development (another dandy moniker):

…it occurred to me that I have stopped “marking” or “correcting” and started reading. I do not mean that my students are no longer evaluated, that they no longer receive grades. They do. But my approach has changed dramatically. It’s taken over a year but I have become a teacher-blogger and I am recording this change because it is crucial to my thesis and my professional development.

I have become a teacher who reads, who looks forward to reading, who comments on student entries and can’t wait to see the responses, who can’t wait to see where the conversation takes us. I have become a teacher who sees my students as writers, as people with voices who can contribute to and initiate insightful conversations.

When I think of blogs, I think primarily of what this technology enables my students to accomplish. When I look forward to reading their entries and comments I am really looking forward to thoughts made visible.

“Thoughts made visible” may be the best line I’ve heard attached to blogging since “narrate your work”.  The post finishes with “participation engenders competence”, which is in the running as well. 

I was up until the wee hours last night grading assignments for Text Technologies, which is always a difficult process for me on a number of levels (in this case made easier by the fine quality of student work), so this went down well with my second cup of coffee.

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Oh, the indignity…

First I write a long-ish posting about my presentation at NERCOMP, and the event itself, and what a brilliant guy Bryan Alexander is, and how much I enjoyed the other speakers, and spice it up with copius details about long travel days that could not be interesting to anyone, but did pack a certain cathartic punch when I wrote them. And do I ever go on about how tired I am after two nights of three hours sleep each, and the prospect of another cross-continent flight back to Vancouver.

Then I somehow delete most of the post in the course of an ill-conceived edit.

I sit here in the airport, doing my best not to succumb to an orgy of self-pity.

Then I log onto the wireless network, check out NHL Radio, and learn that not only is there an NHL game on in Boston tonight… the freakin’ Maple Leafs are visiting the Bruins!!! HERE!!!! Just a couple miles away.

My inner child is throwing a fit of epic proportions. Thank the Goddess that the Bruins don’t play in the Gahden anymore, or I might not make it onto the plane.

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Get thee behind me, Moose

All I have to do today is justify my continued existence at the University (preparing a detailed, itemized, budgeted account of projects and activities within the next hour or so), host an event featuring guests from the Open Source Learning Opportunities Group (and have them over for dinner afterward), finish up a pile of grading (great piece on the subject here via Mode for Caleb), and get things in some kind of order before I fly to Boston tomorrow for a NERCOMP workshop on Emerging Technologies (oh yeah, I guess I gotta prepare something for that too).

So I really have no right to be blogging… but I must share this graphic created by Rob Cottingham for Northern Voice:

Lots of amazing bloggers have signed up already, and space is limited — don’t miss out on the next great Canadian blogfest, register now.

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Timely reviews of multi-user blog tools…

As I mentioned last week, I was surprised by how many EDUCAUSE attendees were at least thinking about launching weblog projects on their campuses. They really should check out James Farmer’s reviews of multi-user blog tools. It does not claim to assess the whole field, and it’s not exactly a scientific process. What you get, however, is a thorough, honest and very readable assessment of the major players from an eminently knowledgeable source.

James just keeps on putting out useful stuff. I think I feel another hangover coming on…

BTW… given the way this week is shaping up, posting will be light for a while (or at least, it better be or I’m doomed).

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I have no integrity, and “Run away! Run away!”

After all my posturing, I ended up going to “Heat Up the Street”. A couple of people who apparently read this blog came up to me and asked: “I thought you said you were too cool for this.” Which I don’t think was exactly what I wrote, but I’ll take my lumps. The event itself was exactly as advertised.

Just goes to show I will go just about anywhere if the company is right. Listening to ten minutes of Gardner and Bryan argue about the movie Signs (photo above) was worth the trip to Orlando all by itself. I’d drive to Tierra del Fuego for ten more minutes of that.

On another note — I’ve received a couple thoughtful notes asking about my status here in the hurricane path. I managed to secure an earlier flight out of the city, and assuming I get past the bottlenecks in security should be well clear by the time Wilma hits. My thoughts and best wishes are with all those not fortunate enough to jump on a plane and escape.

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Cut the whining

My previous complaints about the weather, the hotel, urban planning, etc… no doubt make me seem like some sort of ingrate. I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention some valuable experiences here at EDUCAUSE.

Our pre-conference seminar on ePortfolios and Social Software went fairly well, though we were hamstrung a bit by time management (ie I talked too much and went long). Michelle Chua and Kele Fleming were a blast to work with in preparation for the workshop, and they both turned in stellar performances. Perhaps the most noteworthy element for me was the increase in interest and aptitude with social software among the attendees. Last year, when I co-delivered Rip Mix Feed with Alan, we had to start from the beginning on topics such as blogs, wikis and RSS, and make a case for their legitimacy. This year, I was impressed with how many attendees were launching or planning weblog initiatives on their campuses, and roughly half said they had personally used a wiki, about a third said they had posted to a blog.

Today I enjoyed the featured presentation by James Hilton from Michigan, who gave a very engaging and informed overview of the challenges to higher learning presented by the new media environment, copyright and the promise of open source. Regular readers of ed tech blogs would not have been surprised by most of what he discussed (though his delivery and observations made it compelling anyway), but once again I found the reaction from the large audience very encouraging… lots of nods.

And as ever, the most rewarding stuff for me has been in the halls. By prior arrangement, I was interviewed by a cohort from Holland. They are sending something like 21 people from 15 Dutch universities to this conference — and to justify the effort and expense they have devised a coordinated set of research questions that they need to investigate in the sessions and by collecting responses via interviews. Then they need to compile their findings in a book — how’s that for accountability on a travel budget? I don’t know if my answers were useful to them, but it was a fun conversation — mostly centering on the balance between rigorous digital preservation of important assets and systems that allow for easy sharing of more ephemeral resources. (I’ll have to return to this theme when I’m not so sleepy — we drifted to a few novel places that I found intriguing.) And I had a couple of good solid Gardner fixes, talking about the usual diverse topics — our ideal visions of higher learning, what excites and frustrates us about our current reality, movies, books, music… as well as his excellent new article on podcasting in the EDUCAUSE Review (which I will blog properly soon). Being able to talk with Gardner and other smart, passionate peers at events like this is a rare pleasure and privilege. And I am truly grateful, however snarky I sometimes get in this space.

But once again, I came back to the hotel and they had left the air conditioning running full blast all day in my empty room. I think I’ll try leaving a note about that tomorrow.

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Weird scenes inside the goldmine…

The exhibit hall has lost none of its power to trigger strong emotional responses from me. You have to move fast to avoid being covered in branded schwag…

And we mean total... Meet the new boss...

The academic commons Quiet spot for reflection

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