Blogging course for Sussex Staff

September 17, 2007

The pilot course we are offering staff at the renowned University of Sussex was confirmed some weeks ago. Many thanks to Sarah Strupinski (Staff Development) and Dr Frances Aldrich (participant) for helping get this off the ground. Hopefully it will be the first of many at Sussex and other universities. One only hopes students get a turn too, post-grad at least.

Our approach here focusses on blogging as a process and a tool for enhancing:

  • research
  • teaching, and
  • professional development (skills & knowledge)
  • personal development (”human becoming”)
  • the Universities profile and reputation – online and off – within key stakeholder groups (eg. students, peers, editors, other media, general public).

There will be three x two-hour weekly sessions on Wednesdays 3-5pm with a two week practice / reflection break in between. 10/17 October and 7 November. Arts C169.

The six-hours of tuition plus tailored research and online supervision have been funded by the Universities staff development budget, so there is no charge for Sussex staff (academic or non-academic).

Here’s the course outline.

Academics Blogging Autumn 2007

We had over 18 people across most Schools quickly express interest. They will have first offer, max. 10 for the first cohort. But please get in touch if you would like to be wait-listed or keep notified of future courses. You may also be interested in the other courses we are running for beginners in Autumn, advanced in January (not at Sussex).

I would also like to offer an occasional tune-up session on campus, say once or twice a term. We shall see.

We aim to create a supportive, stimulating community of academic bloggers at the University. I will be including links to their sites as they come online and are ready to share.

No doubt there will be much food for thought amongst them, and cross-fertilisation of ideas.

Just how we like it!

Enrol here.

Take part in truth

September 13, 2007

Let’s get back to the root philosophy of blogging.

So David Bohm’s the one. Well one of them. “On Dialogue” takes me back to the core of the work I was doing as an undergrad at Murdoch with Structure, Thought and Reality.

The whole discipline and practice of communication theory never ceases to underpin my thinking and excite me. Guess I chose the right course age 17, no matter how meandering it has been. Or it chose me…

And one day soon I will get focussed on bringing all this deep, rich content into the blogging course more specifically. Want to get much more visual here too. But the wikipedia entry for communication theory is a good place to start.

Now there I am showing Tom Nixon the book at this networking thingy tonight (he’s a bit lovely btw). I’ve been thinking for years how important the Dalai Lama’s words on our need for genuine dialogue were. Something small and inconsequential passing comment like… the only thing that will save humanity from the endless cycle of pain and suffering is… yep, dialogue, or something like that.

Then there HHDL is in the front blurb saying good old Dave Bohm is one of his “scientific gurus”. So I guess we’re on the right path here dear people.

“During the past few decades, modern technology, with radio, television, air travel and satellites has woven a network of communications which puts each part of the world into almost instant contact with all the other parts. Yet, in spite of this world-wide system of linkages, there is, at every moment, a general feeling that communication is breaking down everywhere, on an unparalleled scale.”

The question of how we can communicate better is at the heart of On Dialogue. This revised and expanded edition is the most comprehensive documentation to date of best-selling author David Bohm’s dialogical world view.

I’m going to reflect and share more from it as I go on. For now, here’s the link for those that just know they have to get into it now.

I’m delighted that his name hides “ohm” (mani padme hum) in something Oppenheimer, David and friends helped blow the world up with, before they saw they light… He became a real peacenik after all.

All seems rather spooky and perfect from where I’m sitting <grin>.

New choices for blogging course

September 13, 2007

After a long gestation period, things have been moving fast on our innovative, profound and effective (says us) blogging courses. They are now two time slots to choose from – an evening or a morning.

Eight weeks in a row (not including half-term school holiday)

Monday mornings 10-12 noon
8 October – 3 December
or
Tuesday evening 7-9pm
2 October – 27 November

Find out more about them but exploring this site and clicking here, and email Libby to reserve a place or call 01273 540 023 or 07968 687 107 to find out more.

Keeping it simple (and not scary)

September 13, 2007

Bret Treasure [writes about our ajaxy menu planner](http://freebeer.com.au/2007/08/17/finger-food/) over at [Free Beer](http://freebeer.com.au):

>The site is very simple to use and deliberately collects very little information from the window-shopper. The role of the web site is to generate phone inquiries and web forms frighten them off.

Scouta Agents for Mac and Windows released

September 12, 2007

Over at [Scouta](http://scouta.com) we have just released the [Scouta iTunes Agent for Windows](http://scouta.com/download/win), following on from releasing the [iTunes/Mac](http://scouta.com/download/mac) version about a month ago. If you’d like to get recommended online audio, video and podcasts based on what you watch (no ratings required), the grab and install the Agent, and it will watch what you watch and listen to and recommend more relevant content for you.

![Agent Icon](http://nodestone.com/wp-content/uploads/2007/09/agent-icon.png)

Over at dconstuct 2007 last Friday, [Tom Coates](http://2007.dconstruct.org/speakers/#tom) was talking about how your product extends further than your website. Well, adding these agents means that you can get the Scouta recommendation experience without leaving your iPod, Apple TV, or iTunes. It can be a pretty magical thing to get recommended content just showing up on your iPod without having to do anything apart from syncing your iPod now and again.

Busy commuters are going to totally love this.

Want to learn how to blog really well?

September 10, 2007

Still some places left on the blogging course I am running in Brighton for eight weeks from 25 September, Tuesday nights 7-9pm. Call Varndean College to book in on 01273 546604.

I’ve already had chats with some of the participants direct and it’s shaping up to be a very stimulating group of people. Mainly folk who have never blogged before.

Can’t wait.

Feel free to get in touch if you want to know anymore about it. But check this site first under Courses and click through the information provided.

Cory Doctorow on “How to be a top blogger”

September 10, 2007

Some great tips here for all budding bloggers by net guru and writer Cory Doctorow. Well worth viewing to get the real meaning, but here’s the top three tips:

  1. write headines like a newswire writer, ie. be specific, short and sweet
  2. open with a traditional news style lead paragraph with who, where, what, why, when – or at least the key information right up front.
  3. respect your readers.

Or so Cory says. Click through to also consider what Jakob Nielsen has to say about making web pages user-friendly.

« Previous Page