Uncategorized03 Mar 2007 04:17 pm

With today’s tools, you can actually make products of the quality below.  So watch this video–watch it with the eye of a movie-maker, noticing how it was made–and start collecting stuff on your blogs, and writing your ideas, for your own project.

The topic itself is very interesting too.  The internet as we know it may disappear because of corporate greed and American laws.

Industrialization and Meaning of life and Writing and education20 Feb 2007 01:26 pm

“Animal School” is quite an allegory.
This is not an assignment, but I’d love to hear your thoughts in “comments”.  Maybe you’ll want to show it to friends, parents, or teachers.  Do you recognize anyone in this school?  (No names.)
I’d also like you to notice the form of expression.  Would this be as effective without images and sound?  (Notice, it is still a piece of writing, beneath it all.)

The movie is here.

The future? and Industrialization and Meaning of life and Writing and education20 Feb 2007 01:15 am

This is a cross-post from spells, my English classes’ class blog.  You should see it too.  Show your parents.

This video has been seen on the web thousands of times. It’s by Karl Fisch, a school technology coordinator outside of Denver, Colorado. (Karl hooked us up with the 1001 Tales Denver students we’re writing with on the wiki). Karl’s blog was so rich with ideas, I blogged reflections on them for about a full week during Winter Break.

Somehow that led to us networking–a real world example of how blogging with a purpose, an identity, and with care can lead to unforeseeable and very cool things.
Watch the video. Think about how it would be different if you just read the information on a Word document. Also, think about how this is still simply a Powerpoint presentation–but not your average one. What makes it different?

Finally–think about what it says about the future world and workplace you are entering. Maybe then you’ll understand, if you don’t already, why I, as a teacher, include so much digital work in what you do…

Writing and Blogging19 Feb 2007 09:17 am

Check out these amazing “blog blings” here.  Lessons to add all sorts of stylish stuff to your blog.

The future? and Industrialization07 Feb 2007 11:02 pm

Malthus didn’t see this one coming.  Funny how even starvation and food shortage seems mild compared to this stuff–which is happening right now, and growing in speed.
It’s how the Industrial Revolution is still effecting us, 200 years later.

This is your future (and our present).  Every time you consume energy, paper, etc, you add to this.  Scary stuff.

You can freak out–not very helpful–or you can stay calm, be intelligent, and change a few small addictions and habits….to make a big difference.

(Photo credit: From site.)

Writing and Assignments22 Nov 2006 04:37 am

Make sure you follow these rules–penalties if you don’t! (Thanks to Patterson’s Class Blog for publishing these.)

First, some important rules about blogging.

1. Please, no last names, school names or addresses.

2. Do not link to your personal blog/journal from your school blog; you might reveal information on there that you don’t want to reveal on your school blog.

3. If you want to write your opinion on a topic, make sure you’re not going to be offensive to anyone as you write it.

4. Always make sure you check over your post for spelling errors, grammar errors, and your use of words.

5. Never disrespect someone else in your blog, whether it’s a person, an organization, or just a general idea. You can criticize ideas–and I encourage that–but you can do that without attacking the people that have the ideas.

6. Don’t write about other people without permission; if you can’t get their permission, use first names only. Never share someone elses last name.

7. Watch your language! We’re not at home, we are at school, this has to be at least remotely professional looking.

8. Make sure things you write about are factual. Don’t be posting about things that aren’t true.

9. Keep it education-oriented. That means that you probably shouldn’t discuss your plans for the weekend.

Meaning of life and Writing and Assignments21 Nov 2006 02:15 pm

…that we started blogging–about time. And time-travel. Which is what, through the magic of words on paper, history is: time-travel.

I know: bo-ring. Nothing can be more dull than history. Who wants to waste their time on a mountain with a view of everything that happened in this planet’s past, listening to the voices of great people long dead? Give me TV any day: everybody knows that Friends and Family Guy (which I like, by the way) are much more interesting than, oh, I don’t know:

Michelangelo painting himself skinned in Jesus’ hand on Judgment Day.

Leonardo sketching a helicopter 500 years before it was possible.

Luther running from the Pope’s police after standing up to Church corruption.

Socrates drinking poison rather than apologize for showing how ignorant the “experts” are.

Jesus trying to make people love and explain that “the Kingdom of Heaven is within you.”

Copernicus pushing the earth into orbit and the sun to the center.

Galileo seeing heaven through a toy, and noticing how different it looked from what everybody “knew.”

Heironymous Bosch painting another weird nightmare.

Mohammed delivering Yahweh/God/Allah’s latest message to an unbelieving world–and winning a large part of the world.

Buddha sitting under a tree for 40 days to conquer fear and desire, “wake up,” and announce an “eightfold path” to inner peace.

Bruno burning to death for asking if maybe there was life on other planets, and noticing there’s no “absolute up or down” in the new universe.

Henry VIII starting a new religion so he could get a divorce.

Aztecs greeting Cortes as a god before he destroyed their civilization.

Columbus giving Caribbean natives funny hats before enslaving, then converting, them.

Da Gama capturing Indians on a boat, tying them up, then chopping off their hands so they couldn’t untie themselves as he set the boats they were on on fire.

Charlemagne giving the conquered Saxons a religious “offer they can’t refuse.”

Gee, the list could be longer–I haven’t talked about Henry the Navigator, the Crusades, Newton, and more–but this is just too boring.

Especially because Friends is on. I wonder what that whacky Phoebe is going to do on this episode!

I think you get my meaning.

So here’s your assignment for the rest of the year (beginning the first week of February) UPDATE FEB. 23: You have your research blogging project right now, so ignore the parts with a strikethrough below.

You’re going to have your own blog, linked to this page, where you write about something–anything–from our readings, class discussions, and your own thoughts about history and this planet that is interesting to you. the progress of your research.
You will write three times a week, around 15 minutes for each blog post–that should be around 200 words each. (A week is from Monday to Sunday).

Right now, let’s see if you can write freely, without me giving you assignments to write about. Call it an online journal.

And that journal will reflect NOT just what we’re learning, but the meaning that your mind makes of it all.

How will it be graded? (Horrible question, but:) You’ll choose a number of posts–maybe five–that you think are best at the end of every month or so. I’ll look at the rest and take points off if you’ve been lazy for all the other ones.

What counts as good? Here are some guidelines:

  • Ideas: focus on one idea, person, or event for each post. Write about it freely, at length, letting your ideas wander around it. Not just what happened, but what it shows us about how people and the world really are, as opposed to what it pretends to be. Writing about one thing for 15 minutes gives much more depth to your thinking, and should surprise you (and me and your other readers) with what comes out. Somebody said, “I don’t know what I think until I start writing.” That’s so true. Let your ideas flow out without knowing them beforehand.
  • Make connections between different periods of history we studied–patterns across time and space, and interesting similarities and differences in these patterns are where the fun starts.
  • Discuss how you, yourself, are a product of history. How?
  • Style: write informally (but maturely, with no chatroom spelling and all that stuff). Aim for irony, emotion, wonder, wit, humor, philosophy. Take risks with ideas and language. Did you notice my use of irony writing about Friends above? That’s an example. Show your personality. Don’t be boring. And give your posts good titles.
  • Design: find a nice theme for your blog (under “presentations” on your dashboard). Upload pictures sometimes, videos, audio. Make it look good.

If you have any questions, click “comments” below and ask them there.

Happy writing. I look forward to reading you.