Journalism

November 12, 2007

A Belated Answer

    About a week ago, Brian posted:

Paul Hamilton  left this comment on my last post:

This week, I did a workshop for classroom teachers on using blogging in the classroom as one UDL approach for ALL learners. There were questions about the quality of posted student writing. So, here are my questions to you. Do you approve and/or edit every student post? How much editing do you do? How time consuming is the process? (I notice that you were working at it on a Friday evening!) Do you have any related tips for teachers who are holding back out of concerns in this area?

Since I'm not sure about the statute of limitations on blog responses, I'm going to answer now, as I was asked at the end of the post. 

    I've run blogs where I approve everything and others where my students had all the control of what got published and when.  I always approved material for our student newspaper (now defunct, sigh), in part because I wanted an opportunity to do revision and editing with each student, and in part because I thought the professional nature of the newspaper made sense for such controls.  When I taught speech via blogs, I was willing to let my students decide what they published and when.  We discussed appropriate behavior as well as that if they weren't sure about whether or not to publish , they could certainly seek the advice of their fellow students or their teacher.  Since their blogs were more for reporting research than they were for formal presentation, I tended to cut the students some leeway when it came to the "rules."  If it was readable, and approaching formal English (or, if you prefer, "acceptable public voice,"), then I let it go. 
    In two years of blogging with students, I asked one student to change a piece, once, and even he agreed, after re-reading, that he shouldn't have hit "publish" in the first place - but that he was frustrated when he made the post.
    The time involved with editing is much the same as with not editing.  I think it's irresponsible for a teacher to require writing and then to not read that writing.  (I don't mean read every word; teachers, though, should at least skim every post a student makes, for a number of reasons.)  So whether or not a teacher is editing prior to publication, or is reading after publication, the time factor is still there.  I would argue for making the time spent editing a student's work with a student a learning experience, akin to a writing conference.
     The trick, when editing, is to help the writer to become a better writer - and not to mask their student voice with your own teacher voice.  I struggle with that one every time I work with a student in a conference. I don't think we should edit every word or sentence for grammar and proper punctuation - but we should attend to egregious errors.  Your own judgment will help you to determine what "egregious" means for your students. 
    I hope this is helpful, even if it's a bit late.  You asked a great set of questions, Paul.  Thanks, Brian, for allowing me to take a crack at them. 

October 13, 2007

Worth Watching. And Thinking About.

    I tweeted this.  Then Dean posted it.  And he's right to do so  - I'm forgetting to blog in the wake of Twitter.  And that's a bad thing - worthy of a podcast in the near future.  Will's having the same trouble, it seems, as are others in my network(s).  Things are getting ever-more complicated.  And that's a good thing. 
    Anyway - I think this video is of interest to many - both because of the way it was made - which I like very much - as well as the accompanying post on the statistics behind its creation.  What a great model for transparency in creation - as well as a good piece for conversation.  Enjoy. 

February 25, 2007

Media RoundUp

    Lots of good stuff has either slid through the podcatcher or across the TV screen lately.  Thought you'd be interested in these two.

Frontline is looking very seriously at the future of news as well as what it means to keep secrets in a four part series called NewsWar.  A teacher's guide is in the works and you can already view some of the show online.  (Frontline also keeps a collection of episodes online for viewing.  I love PBS.  And WGBH.)

Open Source the radio show
recently did an hour on the One Laptop per Child program.  I'm wondering how to get one of those machines in hand so that I can fiddle a little bit -- but I'm guessing that won't happen anytime soon.  One concern I have about the program is the notion that the computers are a magical solution.  I hope no one expects that simply distributing laptops will create a better educated world.


January 31, 2007

No Correction. Sort of.

   

The upshot of my correspondence with a very pleasant Ms. Radcliffe today (We've exchanged six messages so far, three each way.  She asked me not to share hers, so I won't share the messages, but I will share the outcome) is that no correction will be issued as no error has occurred.   
    I disagree with that assessment.  I have inquired of her as to what my next step should be.
UPDATE:  As I was writing this post, this update appeared on their blog.  I suppose that's a step.
    I'm about ready to move on, though.  I don't really think this is a battle worth fighting.  The larger issue of anonymity is one worth revisiting from time to time.
    I understand teachers work in places where their "free speech" will get them fired.  I also understand that, sometimes, "free speech" isn't all that free.  Yes, teachers should stand up to unsafe or illegal working conditions or student situations, and there is a time and a place for doing so anonymously.  But those times and places should be few and far between.
    Plenty of anonymous teacher blogging that I've seen is responsible, but I fear that being anonymous allows for the times when the anonymous teacher wants to call someone an idiot, or a headcase, or other another defamatory, inflammatory term.   There's no responsibility to be fair or accurate in those instances.
    That's not okay.  Not in public, at least, and not in a professional capacity.  We've got enough problems to work through in our schools without a lack of civility among the supposed "grown-ups."

September 10, 2006

Broadcasting History

    I was asked by a PR firm working for CNN to remind y'all that CNN's website will feature the coverage from 9/11/2001 tomorrow:

Dear Mr. Hunt,

Tomorrow is going to be a rough day -- the fifth anniversary of the attacks of September 11, 2001. As an education writer and observer, you know the value of a “teachable moment” -- and that it must be used properly. Tributes and recollections will appear everywhere, filtered through the eyes of analysts, journalists, bloggers, politicians and every other American with access to a podium – in print, on a street corner, on the air or online. But five years can muddy recollections – and for many students, five years ago is an eternity.

There is a great resource available for free that can help. CNN Pipeline – CNN.com's premium video news service -- will replay, without charge, CNN’s coverage from that day precisely as happened five years ago, beginning at 8:30 a.m. (ET), minutes before the first news reports of a plane hitting the World Trade Center in New York City.

CNN Pipeline is comprised of four separate feeds. Through them the rebroadcast will supplement its coverage with live reports from memorial services in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Pennsylvania.

One more thing: To be sensitive to those online users who do not wish to see the replay, CNN Pipeline requires those who want to see the footage to click on Pipe 4 to launch the program.

The people who frequent Bud the Teacher care about education and are tech-savvy and culturally aware. They’ll appreciate knowing that this opportunity exists. On behalf of CNN, we hope you’ll tell them.

     I'm getting more and more of these press release-type e-mails, although I don't usually respond to them.  (Maybe that's a session for a future conference -- Blogger as PR Target: Responding to the Corporate Press Machine.)  This one, though, is likely worth passing on.  I was glued to CNN for a few weeks during/after 9/11.  It was a pretty scary time.  And, yes, I know that's a pretty United Statesian-centric worldview.  But it was.  Scary. 

    I probably won't be using this tool in my classroom -- I wasn't planning a very long remembrance.  Our school-wide daily writing prompt tomorrow is "Remember."  It's open ended because I know that some students won't want to think about 9/11 -- and I'm not sure it's my place to force them to.  Then again, it might be, but that's a post for another day.   

    I will check in with the coverage with my journalism students -- but that's all.   I'm not sure that I like the idea that this footage is being reused, in part, as a promotional tool for a new web-based news service.  I do, agree, though, that seeing the original footage has some educational value. 

September 06, 2006

Google News -- The Good 'Ol Days

    (Via Josh)

  Google has now put together a News Search specifically for archived news from the last 200 years. According to TechCrunch (and my quick scan) the information available is spotty, but I was blown away by a few quick searches.  I imagine this is a resource worth exploring further.
    Wow. 

June 07, 2006

An Awareness Film: The Internet

       

    Here's the next installment of OldeSchoolNews.com's Awareness Films.  The film is about the Internet.  Both the student and I agree that this isn't as solid as the first piece -- but we've both learned a lot along the way.  Hopefully, we'll see more Awareness Films over the summer.  Future topics are slated to include Internet safety and recycling. 

May 09, 2006

Awareness Films

I am very pleased to present to you the first in a series of short, educational "filmstrips" produced by the staff of OldeSchoolNews.com.  We're calling them "Awareness Films."  The first, produced by Zach, is called "Infection & You."  Enjoy. 

March 03, 2006

Our First Podcast

    Our first podcast is up over at OldeSchoolNews.  Melissa, our first student podcaster, did a great job of reading her profile of our school's counselor.  She was very nervous, but ultimately very proud of what she accomplished. 
    More to come, I hope, as students begin to get their current round of writing finished.  The comment to the story is just why we're publishing student work. 

January 19, 2006

But Who's Watching the Bloggers Who Are Watching the Bloggers?

   

Mediashift, a new blog from PBS that will focus on New Media, made its debut yesterday.  Looks pretty interesting:

And each week, I’ll pose a more pointed question to you all to get Your Take. The following week, I’ll do a roundup of the best of what you’ve offered to share with us. And once per week, I’ll do a feature called Digging Deeper that will include deeper thinking and even interviews. Eventually, I’ll start a weekly podcast, add audio and video to the site, and do more stories that include you in a two-way conversation.

And I hope that together we can break the bonds of traditional blogging and journalism. The more I think about the traditional way of doing journalism, the more questions I have about it. If I’m a movie critic, for instance, why does my view rate in importance? I got in free to the movie, the movie stars are there for me to interview, why do I know better than you?

And as a journalist reporting a feature story or news story, why do I only talk to the usual analysts and experts? Why are the same people quoted over and over again in all the different news outlets? Are they really that much smarter than you are?

I'm subscribed.

April 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30