Tagged: blogging

February 1st, 2010

10 Tasks (This) Online Teacher Should be Doing But Isn’t

Teaching has a way of infiltrating and taking over every area of my life. After wrapping up my full-time job’s tasks every day, I work on my classes. After dinner every night, I work on my classes. During my formerly sacred Saturday and Sunday afternoons, I work on my classes.

Thankfully, I only have two weeks left at my full-time job, so come February 15, I should be able to better schedule all of my class to-dos alongside my real-life want-to-dos.

In the meantime, here is a top 10 list of things I should be/want to be doing while my classes preoccupy my mind, time, and computer:

  1. Sleeping. I laid in bed an hour-and-a-half last night and outlined my B-block classes in my head. Finally, I turned on the light, grabbed my calendar from the living room, and wrote everything down. Purging my brain of these thoughts is the only thing that lets me get to sleep.
  2. Dishes. Remember last week when I told you how Chris and I are eating at home in 2010 to cut down on the calories and costs associated with eating out? Yeah, that yields a lot of dishes. And I’ve been going an average of four days without doing them because as soon as dinner is over, I’m back at my computer working again.
  3. Blogging. An editorial calendar for one’s blogs is a great idea, but it doesn’t write the blog posts for you. I’ve made revisions for this week, and we’ll see if I can write ahead of schedule and keep you all interested.
  4. Exercising. Yes, it’s winter, and I don’t have a gym membership, but I do have a Wii Fit, and I can’t seem to muster the mental energy to be told, “You’re a little shaky.” I’m looking ahead to the middle of February when spring starts to shows its face every few days, and I’m going to work toward a daily walk/run in my neighborhood.
  5. Sewing. Did you know that Chris was an awesome husband and bought me a sewing machine for Christmas? Did you know that it’s been sitting on my office floor since then patiently waiting for me to christen it? I have a project planned, but I need to buy the material for it, which should happen on Friday morning. Cross your fingers.
  6. Reading. Remember that list of books I said I was going to read in 2010? And the stack of magazine subscriptions I get every month? I’ve made a little progress, but not nearly as much as I would like. (And the next book on my list is maybe 50 pages. Maybe.)
  7. Crocheting. I have a project sitting out in the living room that’s been getting a little attention here and there. It’s a baby blanket for no one in particular, and I’m assembling it. This part is time consuming and not as much fun as whipping out an afghan.
  8. Showering. Because sometimes I lay awake at night for so long that I’m exhausted in the morning and don’t give myself enough time to take a shower. Gross, I know.
  9. Laundry. And I’ve been wearing shirts and jeans over and over without washing them. In my defense, I did wash all of my jeans this weekend; they walked themselves to the laundry room.
  10. Eating (well). Oh, I’ve been eating. Eating crap. And lots of it. I’ve been eating through the giant tin of popcorn we got for Christmas. I’ve been eating the bag of peanut butter M&Ms I bought for Chris. I’ve been eating the chocolate chocolate chip cookies I made for Bible study last week. To my credit, I am eating/drinking a chocolate protein shake (with/without a banana tossed in) every morning for breakfast. And I’ve been packing healthy lunches: oranges, hard-boiled eggs, grapes, canned soup, 100-calorie packs of popcorn, nuts, etc. But come the weekend, and I’m noshing on whatever junk food I can find!

As you can see, I welcome Monday, February 15, and (hopefully) the eight hours a day I can schedule to my own liking.

What do you think? Brilliantly creative or gigantic idiot? Vote below:

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November 17th, 2009

Social Media Guru I’m Not

After reading this humbling post from ReadWriteEnterprise this weekend, I am repenting for ever thinking of myself as a social media expert. (No, I never said it out loud, but it still counts if you think it.)

Where did I ever get the notion that I’m a smartypants? I can definitely trace it back to grad school and my thesis, which had the phrase Web 2.0 in the title. That’s when I started researching the church and how Web 2.0 was affecting how the church does church. But that was two years ago, and and it is terrifying how out-of-date my thesis is. But I’m still doing work in this field: web development for my church; managing our Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube accounts; working with our volunteers who like playing with these things, too. See, I have experience. I’m not a social media idiot.

So last week, I started a new experiment in Twitter. OK, not really an experiment, but I resolved to engage more people in conversations and to share the stuff I think is interesting. (For a long time, I’ve done very little sharing about the things I love–like social media, blogging, running, crocheting, etc.–because, well, I thought it was a good idea at the time.) And all the experts (who are indeed experts and not gigantic idiots like myself) say that I should do these things so people will like me to build the value of my Twitter profile. And I’ve also been building some value by playing with Twitter’s new lists function. And I’ve been looking for new local people and new social media experts to follow. It’s been fun.

And what is the purpose of this post? I’m not sure. I just wanted to let you know that I’m not a social media expert. I have so much to learn, but what I am learning, I’ll be sharing here and on Twitter. And what am I? We’ll wrap up everything I love about social media (blogging, tweeting, Facebook, YouTube, etc.), tie a bow on it, and call me a social media enthusiast.

Time to vote on this social media’s narcissist’s repentance. Brilliantly creative or gigantic idiot?

Gigantic IdiotBrilliantly Creative (+2 rating, 2 votes)
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November 9th, 2009

Lacking inspiration? Uh, Yeah.

Lacking some serious blogging inspiration. Lacking inspiration in a lot of areas actually. Even a little bit lacking an obsession. Except Twitter lists. I think all I did all weekend was create lists of Twitter users. And so now I’m following a gajillion people. And I like it because there are a lot of people who are a lot cooler and a lot smarter than I am. Who also hate bass rumbling from cars. But then I realize that these people have a lot to say, and I’ve got nothing. Seriously. Not one original thought flowing through this brain. Bleh.

Hopefully our bloggers meetup tonight will give me some inspiration. At least I get to eat some fish and chips!

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April 14th, 2009

Springfield Bloggers Association Meet-up Tonight!

Quick, quick, quick post this morning. Huge day at work. It’s only 8:55 and I’ve already hit the ground running. Just wanted to remind all the Springfield, Missouri, bloggers that we have a Springfield Bloggers Association meeting tonight at Patton Alley Pub at 7 PM. And since I’m “in charge” of this meeting and I’ve never attended one of these meetings before, things could get interesting. As an extra side of motivation, my hubby wrapped up a Springfield Bloggers Association logo for us last night, and if you attend, you’ll get a sneak peak at it!

Personally, I’m sort of playing catch-up from my three days out of town last week. I’m so thankful I got to spend time with my family. We ate well, played board games, visited my aunt’s farm and her farm babies, and just had a great time with one another. I have pictures from the weekend that will probably be published tomorrow. I’m also in this weird crafty mood lately. All I want to do is crochet or sew or paint or go antiquing. Last night, I refashioned an old Old Navy sweater into a fun little cardigan, and I’ll have pics of it this week, too.

OK, Springfield bloggers, I’ll see you tonight, and my other wonderful readers, I’ll talk to you tomorrow!

April 6th, 2009

Brilliantly Creative? Gigantic Idiot? You Decide.

Today is the first of 31 Days to Build a Better Blog Challenge, as presented by Problogger.net, and I’m really excited to see how much better I can build my blog in the next month. Today’s assignment? Write an elevator pitch for my blog.

Doh! Is it a good or bad sign that I’m already stuck on my homework, and it’s merely the first day of class? Regardless of the answer, I’m going to hammer this thing out. My first method of attack is revisiting the Cynthia Heimel quote that was the impetus for this blog’s title:

When in doubt, make a fool of yourself. There is a microscopically thin line between being brilliantly creative and acting like the most gigantic idiot on earth. So what the hell, leap.

Frankly, I think this is a great start to an elevator pitch because it sums up my blog quite well. Yes, I do tend to make a fool of myself. Yes, some of what I write is brilliantly creative. Yes, some of what I write makes me look like a gigantic idiot. My audience determines where the microscopically thin line falls. I try to leap once a day, or at least several times a week. And I enjoy a little profanity with my coffee.

Darren’s ideas for writing an elevator pitch suggest that my blog should have a niche (i.e. solve a problem, meet a need, ask a question, etc.), but what do I do when the niche is me? I call upon Akhila Kolisetty who wrote Forget All the Rules and Write What You Love today at BrazenCareerist.com:

Just write for the hell of it. Write whatever comes into your mind at that moment. Hit publish whenever you want, even if it’s 3am and no one’s “listening.” Write what you love, what you care about and are most passionate about. And most importantly, be yourself. Don’t confine yourself to a “niche” or a “brand.” If you’re itching to write about something outside your brand, just do it. Stop worrying what others will think of you. Because people want to learn about and debate the issues, but also they want to get to know you – who you really are. So if you’re not yourself, and if you’re not writing what you love, you’re definitely not going to enjoy blogging or make the most of it. And what’s the point of spending so much time and effort on something that you don’t genuinely love?

Truly, this is what I do on AFOM. It’s just that I love writing. Gloria Steinem said it best when she said, “Writing is the only thing that, when I do it, I don’t feel I should be doing something else.” Sometimes my love of writing manifests itself in loves for blogging or the latest movie or a good book or running or videos of kittens on YouTube, and my readers never know what they’re going to get. Regardless, writing is my cathardic out; it’s how I purge all-consuming musings, so I can make room for more thoughts. It’s how I make sense of myself and my world.

Here’s what I have so far:

Hi, I’m Sarah Jo. I write A Fool of Myself, a semi-personal blog that allows me to make a fool of myself on a semi-daily basis. Sometimes I’m brilliantly creative. Other times I’m a gigantic idiot. My readers determine where the microscopically thin line between the two falls. I write about what I love, and on any given day that can range from blogging to running, from good books to kittens.

I definitely like that I’ve used the foundation quote to shape the elevator pitch. I also like how I’ve given my readers the job of deciding where that thin line falls. I have an image of a Fool-of-Myself Meter at the bottom of each post that allows readers to rate the post as brilliantly creative or gigantic idiot. That would be hilarious.

Darren is correct, having this pitch written down gives me direction for my blog and will help me continue to shape it. I can already think of a few places I need to implement this pitch or some version of it. It’s definitely going to show up in this blog’s tagline and on the About page, and I’m thinking I’ll change the pure-genious category to brilliantly-creative and the w00t category to gigantic-idiot because that’s sort of how they’re already functioning. Thoughts anyone?

March 27th, 2009

Oodles and Oodles of Fun (and Craziness), Oh My!

Sheesh! This has been a whirlwind week. Lots and lots and lots going on. All of them awesome. But none of them allowing me to sit down and think and write even though all of them are blog, Twitter, web development related. What a catch 22. Let me share a few of them, so you know what’s going on.

SGFblogs.com

As many of you know, I’ve sort of dove in with the Springfield Bloggers Association. Mostly ball picking upping, which I’m happy to do. I love blogging. I love bloggers. You all know this. I hope that’s one of the reasons you read me nearly every day. Anyway, I’ve been at work on the SBA’s blog for a week or so, and I met with Andy Cline last night to discuss the blogroll and other possibilities for the group. The site is ready for visitors (but be patient, we’re still tweaking a few of the features/design elements), and if you’re in the Springfield area, I encourage you to submit your blog to our blogroll. If other local bloggers help promote SGFblogs.com and help it grow, it could quickly become a hub for bloggers in Springfield. We don’t know what that exactly looks like yet, but that’s why we need lots of bloggers to participate and help shape the group and site.

Project Hawk

Linden and I finally wrapped up our Twitter help guide (code name: Hawk) this week, and it will be published on our blogs starting Monday. A bulk of today will be spent getting my posts ready. We decided to split the four posts between us, Sarah, Linden, Sarah, Linden, so we can share the traffic. Once we’re done publishing, we’re having my husband design a little ebook for us. Chris is helping me with another top-secret project next week that has to roll out on Thursday, so he’ll do the ebook after that. Truly, this has been one of my favorite collaborative writing projects. I really haven’t done any outside of school, and group school projects are always rough when you’re the overachiever. I always got the fuzzy side of the lollipop, so to speak. Anyway, collaborating with Linden has been super fun, and this project counts as my first international writing project.

Continuing Ed Classes

The third project that’s been crazy consuming is completing applications and proposals for a few continuing education classes I’d like to teach at our local community college. Of course, they’re blogging related. I have three blogging classes–beginning, intermediate, and advanced–outlined, and I have a few social networking classes outlined, too. The classes are for the summer, and I need to get on the ball and get them out the door, so they can be reviewed before the summer schedule is wrapped up and mailed to the community. I hope there’s some interest in them. I love helping bloggers work on their blogs. (And I could use some extra cash.)

So my blogging may be a little scarce for the next two weeks or so. I’ll try to get in a few updates here and there, but don’t worry if I’m not around. I’m here. I’m checking in. Just not writing too much. Oh, yeah, and then there’s Easter and I’m going home to hang out with my folks for a few days, and there’s not much in the way of Internet speed there. I just stay up with my mother until 2 AM talking every night.

Anyway, have a great weekend! And if you’re in Springfield, stay warm. Snow is coming. (But that’s a blog post for another day.)

March 2nd, 2009

The Blogger, Copyrights & Creative Commons

Sometimes I get ideas for blog posts, and I have no idea where they come from. Such is today’s post. The topics of copyright and Creative Commons have been on my mind. I need to address the rights and licenses of the content I produce on SarahJoAustin.com and the content produced on LifePointOzark.com, and I’ve had this on the back burner of my brain for a while, but I wasn’t ready to do the research.

So I had some time Sunday night to do some research. I started on CreativeCommons.org. This seems to be the go-to place for online content producers, so I reasoned that I’d find a solution to my copyright woes (not that I have many), post a CC image on my blog, and continue with my night. Not so simple.

First off, the beauty of using a creative commons license is the principle of sharing. You decide what can be used by others to create other works, and you decide how you want your credit attributed. Sounds simple enough; however, I’m not so good at sharing. Yes, it’s a principle I learned in kindergarten, but on my blog, what’s mine is mine. And if you want to use it, give me credit, but I don’t want you to change it. That’s OK because there’s a CC license for that.

Adding a creative commons license will specify what I want and how I want it, but after much reading I found out that if someone uses my content without honoring my creative commons license, there’s not much I can do about it unless my content is registered with the United States Copyright Office. So I chased that rabbit. You can register your content online there for a one-time $35 fee, and as far as I can tell, you can upload a single file of all your blog posts.

I also found two very useful articles over at ProBlogger: “Copyright, Blogging and Content Theft” and “How to Defend Your Blog’s Copyright.” The first briefly explained how copyrights work in the U.S., what creative commons licenses entail, and the limitations of CC license enforcement. The second post detailed the author’s experience with content thieves and how he got them to remove content stolen from his blog from their blogs. Very useful.

In my understanding, here’s what you need to know as a blogger:

  • The moment you create your content, you own the copyright to it until 70 years after you die.
  • Your content needs to be registered with the U.S. Copyright Office if there’s a chance you’ll ever take legal action against a content thief.
  • A CC license doesn’t remove your rights to your work; it explains to others how you will allow them to use it and how they should attribute credit to you.
  • A letter to a content thief (or their web host) is usually the most efficient way to have stolen contact removed. Letters to web hosts require some Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) legalese.

So I put up an Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivatives Works 3.0 CC license on SJA. Right now, I want to retain as many of my rights as I can to my materials. When I have a spare $35, I’m going to register A Fool of Myself with the U.S. Copyright Office. Honestly, I don’t know why anyone would want to steal any of the randomness here, but I want to be protected in case something comes up. Plus, it makes me sound fancy.

April 21st, 2008

Guest Post: How Twitter Made Me a Better Social Networker

Today’s post is by Linden, one of my best friends. She and I share the same love for the Internet, Google, and Web 2.0, so when she jumped on the Twitter train, I asked her to convince me to make the jump, too. Here’s what she had to say:

What are you doing right now?Almost every single blog post I’ve read about Twitter highlights the fact that it is made for “micro-blogging” by allowing users to use only 140 characters in which to write their answer to the question “What are you doing now?”

When Twitter was new, many people asked right back, “Why should I care about this, another new fad site? The frenzy will die out in a few months.” It was even called “the Seinfeld of the internet … a website about nothing.” Some have touted it as a marketing tool: Sign up, get people to “follow” you, they will see your “tweets,” and boom! Free advertising for your site or product. And with the ability to send (by texting to 40404) and receive tweets via SMS, it’s highly mobile: A connection to the Internet for those of us too cheap to pay for Internet on our non-iPhone, non-Blackberry, plain old cell phones.

But I don’t use Twitter in any of those ways. Well, I do use it for a little blog marketing, but mostly I use it for its seamless integration with Facebook, my preferred social networking site.

Free Blog Advertisement

I’ve got a blog. And I want readers. I can’t really explain why because I am not Penelope Trunk, who is an expert in her field and probably makes tons of money with her posts, and I’m not Half-Fast, who writes a funny blog dedicated to the topic of running and has even posted on the main Complete Running Network site. My blog is about my life in Germany, with some running, travel, and cool technology posts in the mix.

But I want readers because I like writing posts more when I know people are reading them. So every time I publish a new blog post, I tweet it. This sends it automatically to any followers I have, publishes it in the Twitter public timeline, and sends it off to my Facebook status.

Twitter–Facebook Integration

Once you’ve added the Twitter application and given it permission to update your Facebook status, you can update without logging into the Facebook website.

I love this. I have added twitter@twitter.com to my Gmail chat contacts, so right from inside Gmail I can simultaneously advertise my newest blog post on Twitter and Facebook. Oh, and I can update my Facebook status much more often than I ever did before. (FYI: I am currently using Digsby for all my IMing needs, so look forward to a corresponding Cool Technology post soon!)

“So what?” you ask. I personally like the Facebook status idea: a mini-snapshot of what my friends are thinking and doing. A great way to ask questions, interact with other people’s statuses, and have fun conversations between a group of friends. Hmmm. Sounds a lot like Twitter.

Twitter posts = highly mobile Facebook status updates

I have come to this conclusion about Twitter, even though I have not been using to to keep up with my friends (the only person I’m following that I know in person, Sarah, just joined Twitter about a week before I wrote this post): Twitter is the Facebook status, without the rest of Facebook. It is a great way to ask and answer questions posed by other Twits, interact with other tweets, and have a great conversation between a group of friends. Except that I don’t have a group of friends on the site. Yet. So head on over to Twitter.com, sign up, and add me at http://twitter.com/xgravity23!

(If you arrived at this post hoping for an explanation of Twitter, hopefully you understand it a little better now. If not, check out Common Craft’s video “Twitter in Plain English,” which explains Twitter better than I ever could.)

 

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