22 February 2008
Putting a SpamBlog Tool to Good Use
While blogging my be one of the more popular routes for communication and self-expression it can also be a good tool for elearning. Sir Martin has used it extensively, and so has Ms. Lacs. I’m sure that there are more teachers out there that I have not come across (and I would appreciate it if you make them known to me. Or you make yourself known, ok?). It is my opinion that anybody who wants to use technology for education should start and keep a blog.
Most bloggers would generally be victims of spammers in all forms, shapes and sizes. A form of spam blogs, scraping content from different sources, have targeted a lot of local bloggers like Yuga, as you can probably see at the end of his posts. Though I am nowhere near Abe’s league, I have had some brushes or two siphoners which fizzled out after a while. (I don’t know if I’ll be mad or thrilled, swinging from “Why don’t you write your own stuff!” to “Is my content not good enough for you?”). RSS Aggregators have made it very easy to do just that. While some copycats have actually copy-pasted manually, RSS has made it possible to automatically suck off content.
Though we may fume at the temerity of this practice and blame the creators of the aggregators, a new positive application for this technology has been gaining praise and approval: using WordPress as eLearning platform using RSS aggregators/scrapers (like wp-o-matic the (”spamblogging” plug-in) to collect a series of posts/courses. Here is a try by David Wiley which looks very promising - and anyone who would want to learn about new media (Blog and Soul Movement, this is a great resource to use for schools! Or anybody for that matter). A technologically-similar undertaking by Stephen Downes can be found here.
The eLearning community, especially the open education and resources (OER) advocates are quite excited about this resurgence. Though many admit that it has surfaced before, it is now that is gaining steam and ready for a comeback.
Translation for the Philippines: Imagine the top 10 teachers of of the same subject using the same curriculum. They put their course content (text, images, video, etc) in their blogs under a CC license. A new teacher can re-use, remix content from them and greatly improve the quality of his course. Imagine that being done to all subjects. On all levels.
Then, use WordPress Multi-User… What do you have?
A free online school!
If you can get all these content, courseware, applications and systems inside a USB drive and have a UMPC like OLPC or the Asus EEE and tweak it so it could run by itself, you’ll have a school in your computer!
Scale this globally and we would have revolutionized education as we know it.
There is no probably little or no problem for GoogleReader to be a school with this scheme. I’d like to see them put a big effort to make this one work without making money out of it (read ads or fees). Just because it’s a good thing to do.
Would Microsoft, Yahoo and the others be left behind? Just ditto re: bold line for Google.
To teachers and anybody who has good content to share: PLEASE PUT YOUR CONTENT ONLINE AND SHARE (use the CC license models)!
To the techies: Can you help make the steps of putting this up, maintaining and monitoring easier, faster and more efficient? Maybe a desktop and online application that is widgetizeable, customizable and open source? I’m sure you can make it as easily as I think it.
Would this solve (at least partially) a great engineering challenge of the 21st century.










