Tag Archives: meandering 101

maximizing the meanderings

Thanks to a post entitled “A Year in the Spiral” by Britt Watwood of Virginia Commonwealth University, I’ve got a new way of thinking about my latest leap into the world of social media.

Both his own end-of-year reflections on his experiences within the “Social Media Spiral”, as well a post  http://michelemartin.typepad.com/thebambooprojectblog/images/2008/01/13/socialmediaspiral3_3.jpgby Michele Martin (the original source of the accompanying graphic) mentioned many of the constellation of tools and practices that I’m already well into the habit of using.

Britt writes, “I saw myself in that spiral, and recognized that to grow, I needed to move higher up …

What I’ve discovered in the short time since I’ve begun to branch out beyond my core set of familiar tools to document my meanderings around the web is that writing (and reflecting) in the format of blog posts is … different.  (Is this my blog-ha moment?)  Just how this plays out is something that perhaps I’ll be able to be a bit more articulate about in the coming months.

So far I’m struck mainly by the unexpected difference between having read who knows how many hundreds — nope, gotta be thousands — of blog posts over the past few years, and the act of starting to write them myself.  Sounds trite, no doubt.  But I really had the impression that having logged that many hours, I was “quite familiar” with blogging.

Hah! New discoveries abound, and they are just beginning.

I had noticed that other bloggers tend to highlight milestones in their blogging experience, but now I’m starting to have glimmers of what might those milestones really mean.

I’m also intrigued by exploring “ways to do blog-like publishing in things that are not blogs.”

Onward …

how do I find …?

Whenever I start talking about something like Twitter, or the networking feature of the social bookmarking tool, Delicious, with people who have yet to venture into online communities, one of the first mental roadblocks they seem to encounter is the following question:

“But how in the world do you find people?”

Often, the unspoken conclusion to that sentence is … among “all that awful stuff out there” — the lurkers, those baddies who are out to get us all. My experience has been quite different; I’ve found so many resources and ideas, mostly through asynchronous connections, that have really enriched my professional life far beyond the geographic confines of our small campus.

So, in an effort to document how it is that I have been finding my way, I’ve started a few new tags in my delicious account, and I’m trying to remember to hit one of them every time I’m off meandering and one wonderful thing is leading to another.

I take it for granted that what I call “meandering” — and think of as a very productive process — actually does involve (and rely on) some other skills and habits. What are these, exactly? Not sure, and that’s why I’m embarking on this little project. Here are the links, in case anyone wants to meander along, or join right in:

how-do-I-find (collection of links on delicious)

one-thing-leads-to-another (already seeing some duplicates … see final comment, below)

Come to think of it, this one might turn out to be related as well:

informal-learning

As with all of my tags, I make them up on the fly, as I go along. Some are used once, and then left to obscurity. Others become “sticky,” gaining momentum and becoming a regular and integral part of my emerging system. I suppose that might drive some people crazy.

I like it.

It allows me to DO, rather than have a great idea, make big plans and then end up not having the time to follow through. Big win, in my books.