I’ve been investigating the OLPC quite a bit. I’ve also got back into reading about it.
This is the third year I am doing my roughly annual tradition of taking a week with the blog posting on this site put on “mute” (or muzzle) as I will take all my writing to blog via the comment space of other sites.
So though I took the criticisms of Stephen Downes and others seriously, ultimately I concluded that the potential impact of the Cape Town Declaration on Open Education was too powerful for me to ignore. David Wiley has a number of good posts up lately with pointers to the huzzahs, the critiques, and the alternatives, and I would urge you to look them over and give serious thought to whether you care to add your name to the document.
David also has provided a couple web banners, for those of you who share my evident passion for advocacy via remote-hosted images -- if only it had some javascript to slow down my page-load speeds even more!
Speaking of which, the Northern Voice banners have been available for some time, offering a number of options how to show your love for The Moose. As you may have noticed, I chose the biggest and most obtrusive option for my homepage...
So not only am I struggling to do what Stephen Downes did more than four years ago, now I can't even do what I did myself two years ago.
It should be a simple problem. Assemble a list of thirty or so student weblogs, allowing them to choose their own platforms, and create a reasonably readable aggregated metablog of all their entries.
Every "feed blender" type application I have tried simply collapses under that number of feeds, and collectively represents a huge time suck over the past few weeks years.
I like the Grazr widgets, but the widget does not track unread entries or provide any sense of which entries are new. Ditto for the promising new Ginger release of Netvibes: promising, but a portal view just doesn't cut it.
Don't even start with me on Technorati. It was never reliable, and now I'd rather depend on carrier pigeons or pneumatic tubes. I tried to be a good ELI conference blogger last week, did my Technorati tagging to no effect whatsoever.
Until now, the best simple hack I had come up with was using the results of a tagsearch from Google Blogsearch sorted chronologically, and running the RSS through the ever-reliable Feed2JS. It wasn't perfect, but it worked OK.
But there are perils with depending on the kindness and stability of third party software. And Google is evidently not immune to that. It seems that Google blogsearch has adjusted its algorithm somehow. In any event, the number of returned entries has decreased in recent weeks, even as the student entries have piled up. Indeed, today there are two fewer entries than yesterday.
So we are making OK progress on assembling a WordPress Multi-User courseblog along the lines of the stuff UMW Blogs does. And D'Arcy is making tantalizing noises of a prototype based on Bill Fitzgerald's work with Open Academic using Drupal. Maybe Stephen Downes's impending release of Edu_RSS will do the trick.
But for now my modest optimism is tempered by a long string of disappointments, and hundreds of seemingly wasted hours.