This link has been bookmarked by 43 people . It was first bookmarked on 02 Mar 2006, by Deng Jianguo.
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Robin Hawley-BrillanteA weblog devoted to the uses of weblogs (blogs) and wikis in higher education.
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13 Apr 10
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01 Feb 10
Norma ScagnoliThis blog is a collective resource for academics sharing knowledge about use of weblogs and wikis in higher educational contexts.
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12 Apr 09
Tom BlumeA weblog devoted to the uses of weblogs (blogs) and wikis in higher education.
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28 Mar 09
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14 Jan 09
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10 Nov 08
amy monaghanKen Smith (English Department at Indiana University South Bend ) -
Weblogs in Higher Education, publishes on blogs, wikis, podcasts,
teaching, and related topics. -
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Carlos FernandezThis blog / weblog is devoted to understanding the best pedagogical and other uses of weblogs and wikis in higher education.
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01 Dec 06
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Welcome to Weblogs in Higher Education This blog / weblog is devoted to understanding the best pedagogical and other uses of weblogs and wikis in higher education. Join in... Tuesday, March 7, 2006 A blogging tenet. In today's NY Times, Instapundit Glenn Reynolds pins down the textual practice of quoting and giving credit that allows us to work together and build on what others have said. Without giving credit to others for their words, people can't tell where they stand when they read our pages: Glenn Reynolds, the founder of Instapundit.com, one of the oldest blogs on the Web, said that even in the blogosphere, which is renowned for its lack of rules, a basic tenet applies: "If I reprint something, I say where it came from. A blog is about your voice, it seems to me, not somebody else's." According to the Times article, some bloggers have been lacing their posts with Wal-Mart publicity materials, without saying so. Whether we're writing on the web or in the academy or on newsprint, quoting and giving credit commits us to the transparency that makes collaboration possible. It's the democratic move.
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Welcome to Weblogs in Higher Education This blog / weblog is devoted to understanding the best pedagogical and other uses of weblogs and wikis in higher education. Join in... Tuesday, March 7, 2006 A blogging tenet. In today's NY Times, Instapundit Glenn Reynolds pins down the textual practice of quoting and giving credit that allows us to work together and build on what others have said. Without giving credit to others for their words, people can't tell where they stand when they read our pages: Glenn Reynolds, the founder of Instapundit.com, one of the oldest blogs on the Web, said that even in the blogosphere, which is renowned for its lack of rules, a basic tenet applies: "If I reprint something, I say where it came from. A blog is about your voice, it seems to me, not somebody else's." According to the Times article, some bloggers have been lacing their posts with Wal-Mart publicity materials, without saying so. Whether we're writing on the web or in the academy or on newsprint, quoting and giving credit commits us to the transparency that makes collaboration possible. It's the democratic move.
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