04 April
Gepost door SAM Jackson zoals Blogging, Universiteit, Het Leven van de student
Vinden van een goede student blog is harder dan het klinkt. Het vinden van een goede blog in het algemeen is zeer een naald-in-a-hooiberg zaak, van cursus-vindende goede student blogs kan vooral netelig zijn omdat de zelfde vragen en de onderwerpen die omhoog ook best-geschreven, de meeste zorgvuldig opgesomde exposities brengen uit inane en nutteloos van afschraapsel MySpace slepen.
In mijn huidige positie als onderzoekintern die met danah boyd onder het Centrum Berkman werkt, moet ik vaak ingangen van veel studenten blogs over specifieke onderwerpen online vinden. Bovendien, moet ik altijd op de jacht voor grote student blogs voor potentiële studenten, hogere e-n verkopers, omzichtige toelating benadrukken ambtenaren, enz. Ik houd van te proberen aan moedig aan studenten bloggers waar ik hen vind, die aan hen verklaren hoe hun inspanningen kunnen werkelijk lonend blijken te zijn, zo vooruit.
Ik werd gecontacteerd door een verslaggever van Wall Street Journal een paar maanden geleden wie blogs en student het schrijven op een bepaald onderwerp zocht, en ik kon snel hen sommige hulpmiddelen geven met hun stuk te helpen: hier zijn enkele uiteinden die u kunnen ook helpen als u blogs over het studentenleven op om het even welke bepaalde school zoekt. Deze gids zou handig kunnen zijn als u studenten zoekt voor een officiële blogging onderneming aan te werven, als u een potentiële student die bent meer over een school wil leren, als een school bewijsmateriaal voor willekeurige uitwijzingen wil vinden… sorteert allen van gebruik. Blogs u het zoeken van deze manier zult verschijnen neigen officieuze student blogs, eerder dan school-geleide degenen te zijn.
1. Zoek „studenten blogging netwerken“ als StudentBloggers.org of Het netwerk van Blog van de Universiteit (favoriet mijn blog!) en zie wat zij moeten aanbieden. Het Netwerk van Blogs van de universiteit was eerste één hiervan ik kan denken van, maar het uitgever*kopt vorig jaar (geen nieuwe ontwikkelingen nog). U wordt niet altijd veel kwaliteitsbeheersing, maar weinig mensen vergen de tijd om hun blogs in blognetwerken in te gaan tenzij zij een weinig over hun inspanningen minstens ernstig zijn.
2. Gebruik Google Blogsearch, Technorati, IceRocket, de motoren van het vanilleonderzoek, van wat u houdt: Hier komt de vaardigheid in spel. Welk soort blogpost zoekt u? For certain more reflective kinds of posts, limit your queries to Livejournal; Vox tends to host a different flavor of blogger, and Xanga and MSN Spaces gets you another category altogether. Leave things open if you want to cast a wide net, noting that although there may sometimes be some mild differences between Blogspot or Wordpress.com and Livejournal, you can find great blogs everywhere. The right way to search here is to be exceedingly specific: I randomly decided to try to find a student blog about Pomona, and to find one that was worthwhile I searched for “pomona school class blog.” After a few pages of search engine results, I came to the Claremont Conservative: a nice blog maintained by a few students which talks a lot about what’s going on at the schools from one given perspective. Not so hard to find things, see?
3. Does the school have an official blogging program? Not as many as I would like do, but some highlight student blogs or have students blogging right on the main site. MIT has the gold standard here, with their admissions blogs, but lots of schools have blogs. Sometimes they’re hard to find, so do a quick search on the school’s site to see if they have some that they just want to hide from you somewhere as a test of your diligence. The fact that blogs are official in some way does not necessarily mean that they are biased or worthless or written by tour guides (Even if sometimes they are some or all of those things).
4. Ask someone who knows. If you chance upon a good student blog like Wesleying (which is super awesome, and right now has a custom unicorn cursor which is fantastic) or the Bwog (an excellent Columbia University blog), both of which are blogs compiled by many students, you will find ready links to many other school resources and student blogs. If not, you can ask and people are likely to know. At helpful communities like the one around William College’s EphBlog, links abound. At Yale, it’s hard to name all that many other student bloggers, but I could rattle off at least a few if you asked me. If you can’t ask a website, ask a student! They might know.
(If you’re looking for blogs about the Ivy League, you’re in luck. Without commenting on links between blogging levels and anything else, there sure seems to be a lot of blogging going on in the Ancient Eight. IvyGate remains a strong contender for general Ivy blog, and is a useful portal to other student blogs and provider of gossip. Harvard has a lovely (unofficial) blog aggregator which points those interested in the direction of quite a few blogs. From student Dartmouth blogs to official Cornell ones, there is a lot to see.)
5. Make your own! There really aren’t enough good student blogs out there, so if you’re an applicant, you could make a blog chronicling your admissions process and then keep blogging once you get to school (like me!) or if you’re already at school, it’s never too late to start! I highly, highly recommend getting your own domain–the $10 you pay yearly will be one of your best investments (more on that some other time). You don’t have to get hosting, either–you could just have that domain point to your freely hosted blog at Wordpress.com or somewhere similar. When you’re done (OR when you are starting) let me know and I’ll help spread the word!
Hope these tips are helpful! Comments, results, suggestions all welcome. I didn’t want to make it an exhaustive guide, but just point out a few ways that I find new blogs in the hopes it might inform others out there looking.
7 Responses
I’m gonna start getting cocky, guys. « Kill Jill Goes To College
April 4th, 2008 at 7:36 am
1[…] Yesterday’s entry was a Featured Blog of the Day at Student Bloggers and Kill Jill was a link in (may I say) Sam Jackson’s very well-written article about finding good student bloggers. […]
Alex
April 4th, 2008 at 11:16 am
2Great post. This is pretty much the kind of thing I had wanted to find before starting Student Bloggers. Thanks for including SB and keep up the good writing.
Kyle James
April 4th, 2008 at 11:30 am
3This is great information for schools, thank you! I think every Admission office should read your advice here before getting to far into finding student blogger.
Sam Jackson
April 4th, 2008 at 11:54 am
4Thanks guys, glad you found it helpful!
Kyle–I would like that too, would definitely be good for website traffic…
I actually found out that I directly inspired at least one admissions blogging venture, which is very exciting. I will write more about that sometime soon!
Jill
April 4th, 2008 at 1:34 pm
5Thanks! College X can be found in Charlottetown, PEI- but don’t go spreading that around.
-J
Dan
April 4th, 2008 at 2:05 pm
6Hey Sam thanks for mentioning TCBN! I agree it is hard to find student blogs but I think the tips you listed are great pointers for tracking them down.
I think student (and alumni and teacher) bloggers have valuable information and opinions to share its just a matter of centralizing them. Great post, keep up the good work!
Elizabeth Kudner
April 5th, 2008 at 4:43 pm
7Great tips Sam. I’ve done quite a bit of research on this as well. I’ve found several student blogs, but very few high quality blogs. Yours is one of the best as is Kill Jill’s. I also think http://www.progressiveu.org/ and http://www.collegeandfinance.com/ are decent. Also, if anyone is interested in becoming a student blogger, we are hiring at myUsearchblog.com. email blog@myusearch.com.
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