0. A blog!
This is pretty obvious, but everyone has to have one, and to use it regularly for posting the various writing assignments listed here, including:
- free-writing (quickposts, photos, media, links),
- typing speed trials (quickposts, typing),
- book reviews (books, links, photos, reviews),
- intensive writing assignments (essays, graphics, media, movies, photos, reviews), and
- collective/reflective works (assignments, essays, reviews, portfolios).
Beyond the obvious, that is, by now routine, extensive writing on you blogs (above); there are several other points on which I would like you to focus your attention this week. In class, computer lab. assistants or I will help you make certain that your blogs adhere to the following requirements.
1. Archives
Blog archives must appear near the top of blog sidebars for Writing IVc. This is a requirement continuing from Writing IIIc, last semester. Especially if you didn't take part in the Writing Studio last semester, you should make certain that your archive is at or near the top of your sidebar.
However, there is a change from last semester. That is, to save space in your blog sidebars for the next item (Comment Feeds) if you haven't done so already; you need to switch your blog archives from weekly to monthly display mode.
2. Comment Feeds
Comment feeds are a new feature that also will be required at or near the top of your sidebar in the immediate future. Adding comment feeds provides extra degrees of access to your blogs. That is, in addition to archives (above), and labels and reverse chronological page displays (below). Displaying recent comments from posts on your blog, in your sidebar, is a community-building measure that enables both regular readers and occasional visitors to find active discussions on your blog quickly and to join them easily.
I posted a recipe for sidebar comment feeds earlier on the Writing Studio Blog (Comment Feed Recipe...; October 24, 2007). Please review that post, and then follow the steps to add a comment feed at or near the top of your sidebar. If you need help using that recipe to create a comment feed widget for your sidebar, ask a student who has one already, a lab. assistant, or me.
3. Labels
You must have a widget in your blog sidebar that displays the labels for posts on your blog. This is a continuing requirement from Writing IIIc.
The list of labels below shows minimum requirements for Writing IVc; the number is up from first semester to automatically collect information that you'll need for your portfolio. I've listed new requirements in bold italics:
- books, essays, links, media, movies, portfolios, photos, quickposts, reviews
- Reminders:
- Any number of suitable labels can be used together (separated by commas); &
- Every post must have at least one label attached.
- Select all of the labels above at once;
- Copy them into the computer clipboard (Ctrl+C);
- Create a temporary new post on your blog entitled "Required Labels";
- Before you publish that temporary new post, click in the "Labels for this post" field;
- Paste all of the labels above into the labels field of your temporary post (Ctrl+V); &
- Save the post, temporarily.
Then correct any similar but inaccurate labels visible in the sidebar - on individual posts. The lab. assistants or I can show you how to do this, but we'll expect you to complete the process yourself. When you have finished checking and correcting all of your labels as necessary, you can open and save that temporary post as a draft (keep it; you may need it again).
Settings
A laboratory assistant or I will help you find and confirm the following settings:
- Backlinks (enabled);
- Comment Moderation (OFF!);
- Page Displays (last two weeks); &
- Security Measures:
- Unlisted blogs,
- Comments from registered Bloggers only, &
- Word verification (ON!).
[783 words]
About refining labels that you've used on your blogs, I wrote:
ReplyDelete"...[C]orrect any similar but inaccurate labels visible in the sidebar - on individual posts..." (November 17, 2007, emphasis added).
However, once you have created accurate labels, such as "books", "portfolios" or "reviews", you can apply them, one at a time, to multiple posts that you select in your Dashboard: Manage Posts list, using check boxes and the drop-down menu of label choices above the upper left corner of the list frame.
I'm afraid, however, that you still may need to remove all of the inaccurate labels by hand from individual posts. Yet doing so is not as urgent a task as applying accurate labels immediately, and using them from now on.