CTERblog
This is a group blog by the students in the CTER (Curriculum, Technology, and Education Reform) program at the University of Illinois, Urbana/Champaign
Saturday, August 13, 2005
Thursday, August 04, 2005
M-I-C...K-E-Y Ideas Please!
Thanks to all of you who responded to my Mr. Kotter post (I have watched WAY too much TV in my lifetime!). I know that it was probably a lame 1st post to ask a question, but I loved seeing the responses.
On a side note, my family is gearing up for a jaunt down to Orlando to visit Mickey (Arg - I'm feeding into the commercialism of youth!). Anybody have suggestions of things to make sure that we do with our 2-year-old daughter?
Wednesday, August 03, 2005
How does Mr. Kotter Blog?
Someone mentioned that she or he trained teachers how to blog. How are teachers using blogs at your school? I'm relatively new to the blogging game, so I'm curious as to how you're using it.
This is the first post of the rest of your life
Hello all! Welcome to YOUR site, CTERblog.
This space will become what you make of it over time: your posts, your ideas, your agreements and disagreements. My contributions will be rare, except to urge the process along, if necessary.
What is a blog? It is many things. It is a diary. It is a journal. It is a workspace. It is a newsletter. It is a soapbox. It is a way of writing and adding text, images, links, and clips and quotations from other sources, in an ongoing conversation among (in this instance) a group of fellow students, and then publishing it. There are individual and collective blogs - this is a collective blog. Perhaps some of you will get motivated to create your own blogs -- in which case they can be added to the sidebar of "Links" on the right hand side.
In another sense, a blog is a community: the community of people who post on the blog, plus the community of people who read and/or comment to it. If you put valuable content and interesting ideas here, other people will find it, read it, and eventually link to it themselves. This is how the "blogosphere" grows.
This blog is not a class assignment, and I am creating it with no expectation of what you will do with it, who will dive in and who will not. That is up to you - it is, as I said, YOUR blog.
A few ground rules though, if I may. This blog should be limited to ideas pertinent to the CTER program, the content of your classes, and the issues or questions growing out of them. If you want to address other issues, it is free and easy to start a blog of your own.
Second, this is a PUBLIC blog. People can read it, including co-workers, friends and families, supervisors, (your professors!), etc. This is not a closed or private conversation - so don't say anything here, or say it in a way, that you wouldn't want any of those people to see.
Third. . . well, I guess there is no third. Have fun!
