Writing well about standards

November 8, 2009 by homeschool10x

I’ve been reading a business best-seller which I like and agree with. The book is Disrupting Class by Clayton Christensen and Michael Horn and Curtis Johnson.

I just read the section on Interdependence and Modulary (pages 29-32) in which they explain:

To explain this conflict between schools standardizing the way they teach in the face of students needing customization for the way they learn, we first need to step back and understand the concepts of indterdependence and modularity form the wold of product design.

All products and services have an architecture, or design, that determines  what its parts are  and how they must interact with each other .  The palce where any two parts fit togetehr is called an interface.  Interfaces exist within a product, as well as between groups of people or between departments within an organization that must interact with one another.

I’ve always wanted to write a great set of articles, maybe a book on this topic. I think you could teach college courses on history from the point of view of standards.

- Evolution of standards. think of blacksmiths and cobblers beginning to come up with standards for handles for tools and sizes for shoes
- Interchangable parts & efficient production
- History of vinyl, South Pacific – true? stories? Royalties?
- most screwed up standards and royalties
- lego, standard metaphor of our time. it’s not a game. Big bucks are at work.
- Beta vs VHS
- video games with hardware getting software royalty
- phone industry with monthly expenses subsidizing hardware
- internet, the triumph of standards. Applied technology to big problem, widely accepted.

Are you perfect? Do you pretend to be?

October 18, 2009 by homeschool10x

I love blogging.  It makes me think.  There are blogs I read that make me think and then, I get to blog back. I’m living an examined life and much of it is due to blogging. Who woulda thunk it?   I read about the question of appearing perfect to the kids on an online homeschool blog:

I’ve never wanted my children to think I was perfect, because then they’ll think they have to be perfect, too. I share the mistakes I’ve made, hoping they will be able to learn something through my errors.

Those two sentences are a profound summary of much of what I try to do and to be as a parent.  I hope my kids will learn through me and most importantly, I hope that they’ll see that I try to keep learning. Sometimes, I have to learn the same lesson over and over again. Not because I’m dumb or a slow learner but because life’s lessons are both simple and hard.  The principles are easy: it’s figuring out which principle to apply at which time is hard.

That blog post Never Let Them See you Sweat continues onto another parenting question that I agonize over. How much of my inner dialogue and confusion should I share with my children? The post doesn’t cover this question in depth, it summarizes: They don’t need to be privy to every agonizing step in the decision process, though. My thought is that it depends on the child’s age, the question, and a lot of other factors. It depends.

Young children need to feel safe and comforted. Older children are ready to start dealing with life’s complexities.

Business Advice for Facebook

October 1, 2009 by homeschool10x

I thought this Business Advice for Facebook was brilliant. I’d like to say go for it!

Facebook Strategic Plan

1. Allow individuals to have multiple Faces and categories of friends/contacts.
2. Archiving my digital assets.

Books for Schools in Cameroon – Can you Help?

September 20, 2009 by homeschool10x

I’m really into a personal project so I’m putting my usual business activities aside while I try to finish this up. I’m trying to fund 30 libraries in 30 small rural schools in Cameroon (a small country in Africa). Here’s a piece of trivia about me…I was a US Peace Corps Volunteer 1980-82 in Cameroon (for a quick bio on me, John Edelson). I was contacted last week by Wendy who is a currently serving volunteer who is trying to build 30 libraries in schools Cameroon and is looking for help. As in donations. I helped. A lot. I hit on my friends and family and other X-volunteers for some $$$’s and did a matching grant for $1K to my friends who contributed. We’re most of the way there but there’s still $4.5K to go. I helped. Will you?
Books For Cameroon

I think this can make a world of difference to those kids. It’s hard learning to read….when there aren’t any books!

Blogs, blogging, and promotion

September 18, 2009 by homeschool10x

There are blogs and there are blogs. I find the best blogs to be ones that:

  • Discuss or teach about a topic that I need to learn about. For instance,  SEO and education and technology and homeschooling and karate are topics that I need to know more about so I read blogs on these topics.
  • Are interestingly written or funny or racy or all of the above.  I tend not to read the racy ones in the office.
  • Have an author whose life or situation or stories I find interesting and connect to. So a 50 year old guy struggling to balance work, family, and sports, I find that interesting and very pertinent.  A writer interested in English vocabulary and blogging about it? Good.  Someone with an off-the-walll hobby like joker collection? tell me you are kidding….

Mixing Media is exciting and confusing

September 17, 2009 by homeschool10x

I’ve been a big blogger for awhile so it was with a lot of interest that I read this post about about learning and communication technology.  The cool part of it is the mixing of media. Is that good? Useful? Grotesque?

When I launched my online learning venture a few years ago, a blog was the cutting edge technique for online communication. Forums and Yahoo newsgroups were well-established by then and the traditional internet list-servs and old-fashioned bulletin boards were waning.

Since then, Friendster and Myspace hit their peak and have declined. Google groups came and seem to have gone.

Podcasts arrived and claimed their niche as did wikis and Linkedinand blog communities. They aren’t exactly taking over the world but they seem to have their spots.

Youtube, Twitter, and Facebook, on the other hand, are taking over the world. They have dramatically changed our personal networks of communication and how we get news and communicate. Amazing. Thrilling.

Time4Learning is trying to navigate these trends and find a balance of how cutting edge we should be. We do have a Time4Learning fan page on Facebook. We started it within the last month or so and are up to 600 fans. Is that good? I’m not sure. I try to compare it with the fact the Time4Learning parent forum has 3521 members who’ve joined and 28 users on the site right now (it’s Saturday, 4:48, 7 registered, 21 just visiting) but I find that I’m trying to compare apples and oranges.

So, we’ll keep trying to listen to our members and locate interested non-members where-ever online they seem to be.

THIS is interesting. The Facebook streambox works on Blogger but not WordPress.

FB.init(“793eb3d73fcc069238e5030f804e5953″);

SpellingCity on Facebook

Blogging hits the big screen

September 15, 2009 by homeschool10x

Somehow, I missed the fact that a major motion picture just rolled out in which blogging is the star.  I’m talking about the Julie & Julia film about Julia Child and the cute lady in New York.

I just read a great blog post about it and how any topic is good for blogging.  Want to blog about your joker collection?

It reminded me that there is no subject too specific – - too specialized to blog about.  And that is great news because it means that ANYONE can start a blog.

That’s right.  You have a rubber band collection?  Blog about it.  You dream of becoming an opera singer and you are tone deaf?  There’s a blog in that.  You are Jimmy Hoffa’s biggest fan?  Go for it!  You knit booties for kittens?  Hey, so maybe it’s not my thing, but I’m sure there are plenty of kitty-lovin knitters that are anxious to hear about your exploits.

How about preschool online activities or homeschool software or math lessons?  All bloggable.

Twitter & Blogging – A Natural Fit

August 1, 2009 by homeschool10x

I read Topsy’s BlogWritingCourse blog. She just asked a question which I’ve wondered about.  What’s the relationship between blogging and twitter?  She concludes that blogging is about networking and Twitter is the ultimate networking tool so they are a nice complement to each other.  For me, this raises a lot of questions for me:

  1. Does any blogging software has a tight Twitter integration so that you can fill in the corresponding tweet and get a tiny url back all inside the blogging software?
  2. What plugins are there for integration of twitter and blogs? I imagine that there’s an RSS feed gadget so you can see tweets in the sidebar of  a blog.  There’s probably a lot of ideas here but I’m still a twitter novice so I’m short on ideas.
  3. Is blogging necessarily about networking? It can be. Or, it can just be self-expression.  Does an unread great novel matter?
  4. I’ve a fair amount of blogging experience but not much with twitter.
  5. What about the relationship of blogs to facebook? I”ve long wanted to find a really great integration between blogs and a some sort of forum. The relationships that I’ve seen:
  6. Colocated blogs on a website form a type of community. You can see this on http://www.homeschoolblogger.com and http://www.secularhomeschool.com
  7. Bloggers who join common-interest networking groups can form communities. For instance, a karate blogger can be part of a group of the Convocation of Martial Artists (now a Ning group, it was recently transformed from a Google group) .
  8. Bloggers can join general-interest blogging groups such as BlogCatalog  and find within them, groups or individuals with common interests.  They have a group for our martial arts friends and a group called  blogger/blogging for people interested in: Need help or assistance with your blog and blogging? That’s what this group is created for. You can ask for help from the members or give a hand to others.

NYT: Blogs falling in an empty forest – Dumb Article

June 8, 2009 by homeschool10x

A sort of stupid article appeared on page 1 on the New York Times Sunday Styles section today titled: “Blogs Falling in an Empty Forest.”  The essential mistake was when they compared “blog failures” ie abandoned blogs to closings of restaurants.  Why is that stupid?

Restaurants are primarily businesses that take a cash investment. Closure generally means failure in a significant way.

Blog are primarily creative expressions that take no cash and virtually no effort. Many are created by a person as a type of diary to express something which, once expressed, can be retired successfully. I know loads of “divorce blogs” where people used it as cathartic way to express themselves during a difficult time. When the time was over, they stopped.

The intelligent or meaningful comparisons of abandoned blogs might be to efforts to write a script, exercise regimes, or books started to read.

Now the article does include the important point that some blogs are started with commercial ambitions which often, like many startups, don’t succeed. And like many exercise plans or diets, a blog commitment is not forever.  But the article failed to actually explore the types of blogs, the purpose of blogs, and which of these tend to be disappointments, and which tend to succeed. Of course, the article really annoyed me because there was no way to comment on it directly.  Although I am a lifetime NYT reader and subscriber (currently on the weekend plan), the combination of no comics and no ability to discuss articles online is slowly killing my enthusiasm for it.  Also, some bad articles. I sure wish they would get their act together. Is it that hard?

Here’s part of the article: 

“HI, I’m Judy Nichols. Welcome to my rant.”

Thus was born Rantings of a Crazed Soccer Mom, the blog of a stay-at-home mother and murder-mystery writer from Wilmington, N.C. Mrs. Nichols, 52, put up her first post in late 2004, serving up a litany of gripes about the Bush administration and people who thought they had “a monopoly on morality.” After urging her readers to vote for John Kerry, she closed with a flourish: “Practice compassionate regime change.”

The post generated no comments.

Today, Mrs. Nichols speaks about her blog as if it were a diet or half-finished novel. “I’m going to get back to it,” she swears. Her last entry, in December of last year, was curt and none too profound. “Books make great gifts,” she began, breaking a silence of nearly a month.

Like Mrs. Nichols, many people start blogs with lofty aspirations — to build an audience and leave their day job, to land a book deal, or simply to share their genius with the world. Getting started is easy, since all it takes to maintain a blog is a little time and inspiration. So why do blogs have a higher failure rate than restaurants?

According to a 2008 survey by Technorati, which runs a search engine for blogs, only 7.4 million out of the 133 million blogs the company tracks had been updated in the past 120 days. That translates to 95 percent of blogs being essentially abandoned, left to lie fallow on the Web, where they become public remnants of a dream — or at least an ambition — unfulfilled.

 

 

Thus was born Rantings of a Crazed Soccer Mom, the blog of a stay-at-home mother and murder-mystery writer from Wilmington, N.C. Mrs. Nichols, 52, put up her first post in late 2004, serving up a litany of gripes about the Bush administration and people who thought they had “a monopoly on morality.” After urging her readers to vote for John Kerry, she closed with a flourish: “Practice compassionate regime change.”

The post generated no comments.

Today, Mrs. Nichols speaks about her blog as if it were a diet or half-finished novel. “I’m going to get back to it,” she swears. Her last entry, in December of last year, was curt and none too profound. “Books make great gifts,” she began, breaking a silence of nearly a month.

Like Mrs. Nichols, many people start blogs with lofty aspirations — to build an audience and leave their day job, to land a book deal, or simply to share their genius with the world. Getting started is easy, since all it takes to maintain a blog is a little time and inspiration. So why do blogs have a higher failure rate than restaurants?

According to a 2008 survey by Technorati, which runs a search engine for blogs, only 7.4 million out of the 133 million blogs the company tracks had been updated in the past 120 days. That translates to 95 percent of blogs being essentially abandoned, left to lie fallow on the Web, where they become public remnants of a dream — or at least an ambition — unfulfilled.

Blogs have many purposes

May 25, 2009 by homeschool10x

While many people debate what is truly a blog, I agree that you can do a lot with blogging software which is not a blog.  For instance, you can put your collection of jokers online.  This collection is put up with Google’s blogger software and it’s certainly not the finest collection of jokers anywhere. But it only took minutes using the blogger software.