You Are Probably in the Wrong Place

September 8, 2011

You are probably looking for the 2011-12 version of Kennedy Blogs. If you came here through a link on your own blog, please update the link.

Presentation Links

April 28, 2010

2008

To the Lighthouse

2009

The Panacea

My Question Mark

Fear and Loathing in Iowa

Don’t Worry

2010

Another Perspective

Pharmacist in a Drug World

Living a Webcomic

Philosophy by Example

Career Choice

The Beautiful Life

Class of 2010

August 24, 2009

If you were in my AP Lang class last year, and you think I might still have your portfolio, get it before I gut it.

Looking for the new blog page?

August 17, 2009

If  you’re looking for the 2009-2010 blogs, go here.

Reflecting on the Blogs

May 21, 2009

For the final required post of the year, I’d like you to reflect on how this blogging experiment has worked out for you. Most of you were new to this at the beginning of the year, and now I’d like you to look back over what you’ve done, and tell me how you think it went.

The post should be about average length (for AP: 400 wds; for Perspectives: 250). It’s fine if you approach this question in your own way, but if you’re stuck, suggestions after the jump.

Read the rest of this entry »

Kennedy Blog Posts, Facebook Update Edition

May 5, 2009

Poopypance is reflecting on marriage.

Fred likes this.

Aaaaaaaaah Satan is concerned that I’m dead.

Rog has joined the group I bet I can find a million people who think swine flu is a hoax.

Irunifly is frustrated.

Nicholas has added the Castle Crashers application.

Freshboi27 is now a fan of The Jerk.

Blogging 101: Quoting

May 5, 2009

This post is more about using conventions than providing tech help. Specifically, how do bloggers convey that they are quoting from somebody else’s blog?

First of all, some of you have noticed that on some of the blogs I’ve recommended, like Andrew Sullivan’s, many of his posts consist of a long quote, with a little intro and then maybe some response afterward. I recommend this as a strategy for coming up with topics: see what other people are saying, and respond to it. But you can’t just respond out of context; you have to let your reader know what you’re responding to. So here’s a very short example:

……………………

Christopher Hitchens has a fascinating column on Slate.com this week, where he talks about British interrogation of German prisoners while the Nazis were bombing London. I had no idea they exercised such restraint. Quoting from a book about the subject, Hitchens describes one incident where a German prisoner was being held, and a guard got too physical:

An external interrogator unused to the rules of Ham Common was exasperated by this initial stubbornness and “followed TATE to his cell at the close of that first interrogation and, in flagrant violation of the Commandant’s rigid rule that no physical violence should ever be used at Ham, struck the agent on the head. The incident led, on immediate representations by the Commandant, to the instant recall of [the offending officer] from the camp.” One blow to the head at a time when undefended British cities were being blitzed every night, and the brute was out of there for good.

Hitchens goes on to explain that their reasons for being so strict about it was that they believed roughing up prisoners might get you information, but it was mostly bad information that you couldn’t trust.

………………………

Notice two things: first of all, I provide a link, so that an interested reader can go read the whole thing. Then I provide a block quote, which is indented. On Blogger, you have the option of highlighting text in your post and clicking the button with the quotation marks. The indentation signals to the reader who is saying what.

Also, doing this may have another benefit, by getting you to pay more attention to what others are saying, and making it easier to think of things to blog about.

Blogging 101: Hit Counters

April 29, 2009

If you’re interested in seeing how many people have visited your blog on any given day, you can add a “hit counter” to your sidebar. This allows you (and visitors) to see how many people have visited (or “hit”) your blog. The really simple ones show you a number for the current day, and how many have visited overall.

Now, this has its advantages and drawbacks. You might find it motivating to know that people are visiting; you might discover that it’s more people than you expected, which might make you more likely to blog with purpose. Conversely, you might discover that not very many people have discovered your blog yet. If you’re likely to find the information discouraging or distracting, you might not want one. My own experiences with hit counters, and instructions on how to install one, after the jump.

(Ahem… The “jump” is that link below. I don’t know why it’s called that.)

Read the rest of this entry »

This Week on Kennedy Blogs

April 23, 2009

I’m going to try to start highlighting some of the particularly good posts out there lately. For this first one, I might go back a week or two to do it. Here are some good posts you might’ve missed.

StuTheDew defended his decision to play at the Straight Edge.

Fred thoughtfully considered faith and religion on Easter.

Wernerette debated teen drinking policies in the United States and Germany.

Mixmaster Mack praised Kings of Leon but buried their new album.

Josh shook his head about making government policy with religion instead of science.

Sundance considered the appeal of sniffing chocolate instead of eating it.

Nick announced his new Hide the Elephant podcast on iTunes (!).

If you see posts out there that people should be reading, let me know about them.

Because I’m Curious…

February 23, 2009

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