Is it possible to write a policy for academic blogging that respects a university’s mission but doesn’t amount to censorship? The vice-president for academic affairs asked me to draft a policy for student bloggers. Since we are a Catholic institution, the administrator’s off-the-top-of-her-head suggestions included suggestions like “no foul language” and “no links to porn”. Since it’s possible that an anonymous commenter (or spammer) might leave offensive content on a site, or the contents of a page linked to by a blogger might change, and since a student might actually want to research the usage of a curse word or do a feminist study of pornography, I don’t think a list of “thou shalt nots” is going to help. (We’ve already had one of those lists for thousands of years, and so far it hasn’t solved all of our proglems.) —Dennis G. Jerz —Examples/Discussion on Academic Blogging Policies? (KairosNews)
Examples/Discussion on Academic Blogging Policies?
This was a rough term. Still have a winter term course to publish before midnight but time...
Students are trusting software like this to do their work.
A former student working in SEO shared this. I miss Google classic.
‘People are rooting for the whale’: the strange American tradition of Moby-Dick reading ma...
Googling Is for Old People. That’s a Problem for Google.
I’m thinking this is a still from the cringey Season 1 episode of TNG where the natives bu...
At Penn we have Guidelines on Open Expression to ensure that people can think and speak freely. The policy for acceptable academic computer use doesn’t really concern itself with free expression, but fortunately “In case of conflict between the principles of the Guidelines on Open Expression and other University policies, the principles of the Guidelines shall take precedence.”