Laura Gurak talks
Laura Gurak gave two talks today at OSU and both were weblog-centric. She described the UThink weblog project at the University of Minnesota, and the exclusively-online weblog academic journal she edits. She also mentioned a system for describing the features of any electronic discourse grouped into the attributes speed, reach, anonymity, and interactivity.
Because I somewhat obsessively note books that are mentioned in talks, I have a list from her talks today that I give you with no context whatsoever:
I've been working in and around (and publishing my own) weblogs for so long now that I've had glasses and glasses of the blog kool-aid many times over. I already know the benefits of sharing stuff freely in a public way, even though my writing isn't perfected and polished here as I would strive for in a book or article. It was really surprising to me to hear resistance to the concept of weblogs from the OSU faculty.
Update: The OSU Barometer covered her talk: Leading Internet scholar addresses blogs in education
Because I somewhat obsessively note books that are mentioned in talks, I have a list from her talks today that I give you with no context whatsoever:
- Victorian Internet by Tom Standage
- Electric Rhetoric by Kathleen Welch
- Network Nation by Hiltz and Turoff
- Life on the Screen by Sherry Turkle
- Computers as Theatre by Brenda Laurel
- Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace by Lawrence Lessig
- Yale Web Style Guide
- CultureCat (by Clancy, a Ph.D. student in her department)
- The Web Credibility Project at Stanford
- Educational Blogging by Stephen Downes
I've been working in and around (and publishing my own) weblogs for so long now that I've had glasses and glasses of the blog kool-aid many times over. I already know the benefits of sharing stuff freely in a public way, even though my writing isn't perfected and polished here as I would strive for in a book or article. It was really surprising to me to hear resistance to the concept of weblogs from the OSU faculty.
Update: The OSU Barometer covered her talk: Leading Internet scholar addresses blogs in education