CABA info on Email to Primary staff: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Wy_lsRSOyb3Y0JkfDlDUB0UNT4n26AnT/view?pli=1
TL;DR is internet talk for "too long; didn't read". It's also a
sad, dangerous symptom of the malfunctions caused by the internet tsunami.
(Here's a most ironic example of this paradox...)
The triathlete doesn't look for the coldest bottle of water as she
jogs by... she wants it fast and now. That mindset, of focusing merely on
what's fast, is now a common reaction to many online options. I think it works
great for runners, not so well for learners.
There's a checklist, punchline mentality that's dangerous and easy to adopt.
Enough with the build up, wrap this up, let me check it off, categorize it and
quickly get to the next thing... c'mon, c'mon, too late, TL;DR...
Let's agree on two things:
1. There are thousands of times as many things available to read as there
were a decade ago. It's possible that in fact there are millions as many.
2. Now that everyone can write, publish, email you stuff and
generally make noise, everyone might and many people already are.
As a result, there's too much noise, too much poorly written, overly
written, defensively written and generally useless stuff cluttering your life.
When we had trusted curators it was easy. We read what we were supposed to
read, we read what we trusted, regardless of how long it was, because the
curator was taking a risk and promising us it was worth it. No longer. Now,
it's up to us.
One option is to read incisively, curate, edit, choose your sources
carefully. Limit the inbound to what's important, not what's shiny or urgent or
silly.
The other option is to assume that you already know what you need to know,
and refuse to read anything deeply. Hide behind clever acronyms, flit
from viral topic to flame war, never actually diving in. It appears that this
is far more common than ever before.
Here's what I've found: When I read in checklist mode, I learn almost
nothing. It's easy to cherry pick the amusing or the merely short, but it's a
quick thrill with very little to show for it.
Judging by length is foolish. TL;DR shows self-contempt, because you're
ignoring the useful in exchange for the short or the amusing. The media has
responded to our demand by giving us a rising tide of ever shorter, ever more
amusing wastes of time. Short lowers the bar, but it also makes it hard to
deliver much.
Please, give me something long (but make it worth my time.)
Perhaps a new acronym: NW;DR (not worthwhile; didn't read) makes more sense.
We've got plenty to choose from, but what we need is content that's worth the
effort.
Click here to view http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-26958079
As a precaution, Firefly only embeds content that has a certificate to prove it's sent over the web securely.
Click here to view http://teachertoolkit.me/2015/11/01/emailworkload/
As a precaution, Firefly only embeds content that has a certificate to prove it's sent over the web securely.
Click here to view http://www.telegraph.co.uk/education/educationnews/11764027/Morgan-Ban-emails-after-5pm-to-help-teachers-cope-with-workload.html
As a precaution, Firefly only embeds content that has a certificate to prove it's sent over the web securely.
Click here to view http://teachertoolkit.me/2015/11/19/emailprotocol/
As a precaution, Firefly only embeds content that has a certificate to prove it's sent over the web securely.
Click here to view http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-36249647
As a precaution, Firefly only embeds content that has a certificate to prove it's sent over the web securely.