Valuable Lessons about Networking
Wanna find out how big your network is? Ask a question.
Eliciting participation is the key to a having a reliable network. Without participation you have a stagnate web space full of old pictures and fragmented comments. My question is how do you gain prolonged interest and participation without constantly going to hot button issues? I believe anyone can gain a spark of interest by publishing an angry rant about teacher salaries, or internet nerds killingAmerica, but what keeps an individual engaged and willing to spend time deep in conversation with others?
Over the past few weeks I have been actively engaged in action research. My subject is professional development. I see a huge contradiction in the way we are asked to teach (MI) and they way we are taught (in-service). I envision a future of on-demand PD that is available to the teacher when they need it, at the time of their choosing, but I digress. It is summer and in order to gather necessary data I needed a different approach. I called upon my network. I have access to 1000’s of teachers across the country. Granted the majority of them are tech savvy, progressive, educators, but I thought that I could gain a relatively large and diverse sample for the simple needs of my paper. I was wrong.
This is in no way intended to be mean or angry and I want to thank, from the bottom of my heart those of you that have helped me. It simply raises a point that I am sure others have toyed with before. How is it possible that one person posts a picture of an airport and receives 30 comments while another asks a serious academic question and receives 4? I blame it on blog ADD. Very few stick to one topic (including me) and explore it in the depth that it deserves. Or could it be that the 3% (on a good day) of people that are willing to participate force us to change topics on a weekly basis just to gain interest? I don’t know.
I have to think seriously about these matters because I am introducing a professional network to my teachers in August. And while the initial excitement will prove fruitful how will we manage to prolong serious discussion over a period of time? Projects? Action research? Do I have to constantly have something prepared to make sure everyone is participating?
I am sorry if this has offended anyone, but I get a real sense of a hierarchical structure to edublogging and it is off putting. I do want to take time to thank my personal network that I now believe only consists of a few handfuls of people but those people are amazing. You folks truly inspire me and always make me feel welcome. I suppose it’s my fault for drastically over estimating the size of the network, but optimism got the best of me. I urge you all to take the time and go answer a question. After all there are no stupid ones, right?
Okay, back to the paper. I will fill you in on the data when it is complete. I believe you will find it interesting.
July 31st, 2007 at 1:30 pm
Ken,
I took an online PD course beginning last November and have been expanding my horizons ever since. I just started blogging at the end of June; I read dozens of blogs on my Google Reader daily.
I’m trying to be a good cyber denizen and comment on posts I read (just discovered your blog today through a link from another blog). For someone without an extensive technology background, it can be intimidating to try to engage in conversations with experts in the field. Sometimes it’s embarrassing to re-read my enthusiastic but inept or naive responses!
My own blog is still evolving and is a blend of personal and professional reflections. Certainly not ready for “Prime Time” yet.
Don’t underestimate the size or appreciation of your audience. Some of us still have the training wheels on!
July 31st, 2007 at 3:04 pm
Great response.
I often feel the exact same way. I really should lose the habit of responding or posting the minute something pops into my head. I rarely let it fully form. This post is exhibit A of that, 2 days later I had overwhelming responses to the survey I put out.
Then again, it’s a blog…not a scholarly paper right?
Thanks for the pick-me up. I think I deleted your blog address you tried to post, please feel free to post it again if you see fit.
Be happy to chat anytime,
Ken
July 31st, 2007 at 4:55 pm
Journeys has moved to
http://dmcordell.blogspot.com/
Nice to “meet” you!