Hapgood

Mike Caulfield's latest web incarnation. Networked Learning, Open Education, and Online Digital Literacy


  • Assignment: Titanic Photograph

    OK, I’m still on a photos kick, but this showed up in Twitter this morning: Here’s the photo alone: And the tweet: https://twitter.com/President_Mommy/status/874617025821368320 Was this really taken aboard the Titanic? What else can you tell us about the photo? Go to it. As usual, don’t read the comments until after you do the assignment. I’m Continue reading

  • LazyWeb: Why Did Trust In Press Collapse in the mid-80s/early-90s?

    I have a question I’d love others to answer for me. So I was looking at longer term declines in trust in the press. And what I expected to see was a long steady fall-off from the peak trust of Watergate and if you look at some charts you see that. But when you look Continue reading

  • Converting a Word Doc into a Digipo Article

    I had some Word documents students had produced that needed to go up on Digipo. I could have directly copy and pasted them, but they were in a slightly different document template. So I pasted and then pasted the separate pieces into the right places. I sped up the video below slightly, but in reality Continue reading

  • A Call to Info-Environmentalism

    When I was at Keene State College, we had a student life group that was heavily into environmentalism, and lots of extra-curricular activities and student learning were structured around making the local environment better. As an example, we’d have a clean up day each year where the students would pick a target — a local Continue reading

  • 60-Second Check: Aircraft Waste Hits Cruise Ship

    When I say you can fact check a lot of things in one to two minutes, I mean, literally, one to two minutes. Here’s an example:   You can sit around and think critically about whether this is possible all day, of course. But the easiest way to debunk this is to discover that the Continue reading

  • Information Underload

    For many years, the underlying thesis of the tech world has been that there is too much information and therefore we need technology to surface the best information. In the mid 2000s, that technology was pitched as Web 2.0. Nowadays, the solution is supposedly AI. I’m increasingly convinced, however, that our problem is not information Continue reading

  • We’ve Made It Ridiculously Easy to Contribute to the Digital Polarization Initiative

    The idea of the fact-checking activity in the Digital Polarization Initiative is simple: civic education as public work. The education piece is simple: students learn how to tell truth from fiction on the web through checking our claims and investigating questions. We have a short textbook on that that they can read in a week. Continue reading

  • How to Find Out If a “Local” Newspaper Site Is Fake (Using a New-ish Google Feature)

    As you may know, one of the great innovations of the 2016 election season was the use of fake “local” papers like the Denver Guardian to spread fake news: The Denver Guardian, as we all now know, was a completely fake site that only published this single page. The page was shared on Facebook over Continue reading

  • Minimum Viable Public Project

    There’s a too-long-Twitter-canoe that is getting into questions of whether use of commercial services are of the faith or not. It’s a worthwhile discussion, but I thought I’d bolt from it and put something on the blog instead. A while ago I decided I wanted to work with one of our most technology-phobic faculty here. Continue reading

  • The Persistence Argument for Running Your Own Server Is Wrong

    Went to IndieWebCamp this weekend, just for a little bit, mainly to listen to the keynotes and hang out with Ward Cunningham and Pete Forsyth. I love the work these people are doing, but I wanted to kick back against one myth there I see repeated over and over. There are a whole bunch of Continue reading