Publishing Changes

Web Tools for Learners - joanvinallcox - October 26th, 2008

The web is less than 20 years old, but I see some remarkable yet indirect changes in the other media which are occurring because of it. Newspapers, magazines, tv shows, publishing, and textbook publishing are all being affected.

About a year ago I noticed that the way the Toronto Star, numbered its sections had changed. I had grown up with the sections in most newspapers being alphabetical, which seemed natural in our print-based society. The change was to a system where the sections were labeled with the first letter of the section’s name. So the Sports section was “S”, the Living section was “L”, Ideas was “ID”, only the World section had the atypical label, “AA”. It looked to me like the web-created concept of tagging, where you label sites you bookmark with terms that indicate what makes them relevant for you, (an approach made workable by hypertext linking) had ousted the print-based alphabetical approach. The Toronto Star had a number of their journalists blogging by then, but to me that seemed like a less significant change. Writers write, and any medium will do. Labeling sections in a new way and expecting readers to ‘get’ it and seamlessly shift to it, was a subtler but more radical change, to my way of thinking.

When magazines started developing an online presence that seemed pretty sensible to me too. Nothing too radical, just information, text and visuals, also available online. There was a cultural and economic bump, though. The paper & print versions of magazines and newspapers charged money. Customers had to pay for their copies. The web culture is based on free access, a very different approach. There are some sites that demand payment, but the practice has largely shaken out to the current web business culture: something for free, and payment only for more advanced information or features. The money is made from advertising revenue.

I also watch TV news shows, and my two most watched, the CBC and the BBC, provide extensive online news, with the BBC even offering one minute world news available any time!

BBC Website

BBC Website

Book publishing, in my opinion, is going through the most radical change. The gatekeepers that made publishing difficult and limited which books were published are gone, along with the jobs (and skills) that used to be required. Typesetting is now done on the author’s computer, using software. Editing is also the author’s responsibility, whether done by the writer or hired out. The expense of a set number of books published in the hopes that they will all be sold is becoming a thing of the past, replaced by just-in-time printing. Self-publishing is now possible and growing.

Last year I tutored a 14 year old who wrote a very really good coming-of-age novel. Rather than seek out an agent and pitch the novel, we went to Lulu.com, worked through the set-up process, and ordered enough copies for her family. They are attractive books that make her, and her readers, proud. Another friend wrote a good, but atypical detective novel; he used Amazon self-publishing because his book would then be part of their catalogue. And I’m putting together a collection of family photos for a Christmas gift (for someone whom I hope doesn’t read this ;-> ) that I will self-publish.

What inspired me to write this blog post was a textbook publishing site I just stumbled upon, Flat World Knowledge Its study texts (read about their very different approaches) won’t be available till 2009, but it is a very interesting and web-culture concept.

So the web is bringing all kinds of changes to the media world, in fact, -

PriceWaterhouseCoopers (PWC) Analyst Marcel Fenez has told the World Association of Newspapers readership conference that traditional media has 5 years left until the death clock kicks in. - http://www.inquisitr.com/5764/traditional-media-has-5-years-left-pwc-analyst/

So what are business and education doing to prepare for this evolving new media environment?

      



Getting Help

elearning Technology - Tony Karrer - October 21st, 2008

My post New Work is about changes in work skills. One of the bigger changes in work skills have to do with getting help. I looked at a couple examples this recently in LinkedIn for Finding Expertise and Searching for Expertise - LinkedIn Answers

This topic came up again in a discussion - Blogging to ask for Help - Colin asked:

If you need input from like-minded people around the world, where’s the best place to ask?

Today I posted a request for reader input in my blog because I didn’t know where else I could ask for help from people outside my company. Is there a more effective way to approach this kind of problem?

There’s some interesting discussion in the thread around whether it makes sense to post a question in a blog. And some alternative places were suggested for getting help. Some suggestions:

  • Discussion groups (TrDev, ???)
  • Ning or LinkedIn Groups
  • LinkedIn to find individuals
  • LinkedIn to ask questions - via Answers
  • Twitter (only if you’ve participated quite a bit)

The issue with Twitter and posting questions through a blog is that you only will get responses from your existing audience.

Am I missing any options here for getting help?

Are there good resources for helping someone know how to use these things to get help?



New Work and New Work Skills

elearning Technology - Tony Karrer - October 20th, 2008

My recent Survey - Do You Know What These Are? really was all about new work skills - skills we should be learning. Actually, it’s also about the fact that there’s not really new work as much as there is new work skills. More on this below. I showed these two pictures:

and asked survey takers to answer the following questions:

1) What’s your age
* Under 18
* 18 - 26
* 27 - 42
* 43+

2) What is in picture 1
# Not sure
# Know the name of this
# Know how it’s organized
# Have used it

3) What is in picture 2
# Not sure
# Know it’s name
# Know how it’s used
# Have used one

The results are no surprise and were fully anticipated with comments such as:

I haven’t used either for several years now.

I don’t think I’ve used one of those since I was at college for the first go-round (80-82)!

I’m under 25 and have used both… assuming by “used” you mean converting the first into shelving for my CDs.

Who still uses CD’s? ;)

While I would not claim the survey is scientific, I think the results were quite predictable. I received over 350 responses with only 16 being people under 18 and 48 from people age 18-26.

For the Card Catalog - the percentage of people saying they were “not sure” -

  • Under 18 – 71%
  • 18 – 26 – 12%
  • 27 – 42 – 3.5%
  • 43+ - 2%

For the Microfiche Reader - the percentage of people saying they were “not sure” -

  • Under 18 – 44%
  • 18 – 26 – 30%
  • 27 – 42 – 7%
  • 43+ - 4%

Note: 43+ Baby Boomer (or older), 27-42 - Gen X, Under 27 - Millennial (Gen Y).

I’m actually think that many of the under 27 people who said they knew what it was - thought it was an old computer.

Work Skills Changing

Most of us who used to use these things know somewhat know that they really aren’t in use anymore. When I did a presentation in Cincinnati, someone in the audience was from OCLC. He told me that they used to ship truck loads of cards to libraries every day. Now, they can print them using one laser printer. It was quite a while ago when libraries began to put signs on card catalogs telling patrons that they are no longer updating them.

We all know this right?

But are we thinking about the implications?

In presentations, I often will cite this as an example of the kinds of changes in work skills that have occurred and are constantly occurring. A big part of education is learning how to do research and really that’s where you learn the foundations of knowledge work.

If you attended college and used a card catalog and microfiche reader, then you very likely were basically taught how to operate when it was hard to find information. Finding content was the biggest challenge. If you were assigned a paper and could choose among some specific topics, you often chose the topic based on what you could find information on. I remember often changing topics when I couldn’t find enough detail on it in the library.

Do you remember that feeling of euphoria when you found some content?

For me, this makes me think of my senior year of college. I was part of a team that was working on building a computer player for the game of Othello. Because it was a competition (each team’s algorithm would play at the end of the year), I wanted to make sure that my algorithm was really good. I happened to be going on a trip to Washington DC to some kind of meeting for Tau Beta Pi (the engineering honor society). On that trip, while other engineers were over at the Smithsonian, I visited the Library of Congress and found this incredible book that had some great descriptions of strategies to win in Othello.

By the way, while this story may implicate me as a complete and total nerd on several levels, I must say in my defense that I also was part of a small group that managed to get help from a local fraternity to fill a bathtub full of beer to share with my fellow engineers as well as was able to get to Georgetown for Halloween.

Still, the point here is that many of us were taught how scarce and precious information was.

Contrast this with a A Fourth Grader Wikipedia Update. My kids face the problem of having too much information and having to learn how to filter.

And, it’s not just access to information that’s changed. You were also taught or learned:

  • Taking notes on paper
  • Optimizing use of the library copy machine (actually I believe we called it a Xerox machine at the time) to make copies of pages of books that you would take with you. This cost significant dollars and time. So you definitely figured out what worked here.

and many other things that were artifacts of the time.

Think about how much has changed:

  • PC
  • Laptop
  • PDA
  • Cell Phone
  • Wireless
  • 3G
  • Access to Trillions of Pages of content
  • Access to Millions (Billions) of People
  • Access to Tens of Thousands of Information Services

Are Our Work Skills Keeping Up?

Most people I know have not participated in formal learning since college on foundational knowledge work skills. That’s really the last time that someone (a teacher) taught you how to do these things. But, if you learned using card catalogs, microfiche readers, Xerox machines, libraries, etc. then what has taught you new skills?

and the list goes on.

Of course, if you are reading this post (and it’s still roughly Oct/Nov 2008), then likely you are a bit ahead of the average knowledge worker. So, maybe you are okay? Well consider the following:

  • I effectively use the Google filetype operator?
  • I know what does the Google “~” operator does?
  • I’m effective at reaching out to get help from people I don’t already know
  • I’m good at keeping, organizing my documents, web pages that I’ve encountered in ways that allow me to find it again when I need it and remind me that it exists when I’m not sure what I’m looking for.
  • I’m good at filtering information.
  • I’m good at collaboratively working with virtual work teams and use Google Docs or a Wiki as appropriate in these situations

My strong belief is that the foundations of knowledge work are changing fairly quickly and most of us learn completely through ad hoc mechanisms that are not likely to yield good coverage. If you could have an expert look over your shoulder at how you do things on a day-to-day basis, you likely could find many improvements. Virtually every one of us would be somewhat embarrassed to have that expert sitting there because we know (in our guts) that we could stand to do things better.

But most of us are not going to have that expert come in to help us. So, instead we are left to our own devices to learn these things. And because this information is horribly scattered and because it’s hard to keep up with the pace of change -

Every knowledge worker could use help to improve their foundational knowledge work skills.

Part of the reason that this new work has snuck up on us is that much appears the same. I discussed this back in Have Work and Learning Changed or the Way We Do Work and Learning? My conclusion out of those discussions is that there’s not really new work. However, the environment is quite different and this is the reason that these changes have somewhat snuck up on us.

All of this is the foundation of our work on Work Literacy.

I look forward to your thoughts.



Week 4 on RSS and Aggregators is Up at Work Literacy

The Bamboo Project Blog - Michele Martin - October 20th, 2008

We’re embarking on Week 4 of the Work Literacy learning project. This week it’s RSS and feed readers.

Although the thrust of the module is primarily about how learning professionals can learn and manage information by subscribing to feeds, I find that I’m more interested in how we can use feeds as learning tools for the people with whom we’re working. For example, I continue to be in awe of the way Spanish Pod leverages their feeds–they make it easy for you to create your own personalized feed of lessons based on your level of language proficiency or the types of situations (like food, greetings, travel, etc.) you want to develop.

I also think that we could be setting up a variety of themed feeds using Netvibes or Pageflakes that would make it easy for people to add pre-selected categories to their readers. Imagine, for example, pre-selected feed tabs for different occupational areas or for new hires or for industry trends. This is a service that learning professionals could easily take on as part of the performance support aspect of their work.

Diigo’s Web Slides feature is another way to leverage feeds. It turns your feeds and bookmarks into an online slide show that includes Diigo’s commenting features. You can put audio with the slides to give a guided tour or create a tutorial.

What other ways could we be getting creative with how we use feeds with learners?



Blogging for Learning–”Audio Blogging”

The Bamboo Project Blog - Michele Martin - October 17th, 2008

This is the last (for now) in my series of posts on using blogs for learning.

Earlier this week, Lee Kraus wrote a post on finding the time to blog. He mentioned that he has a two-hour drive every day, which leaves lots of time for thinking, but not for writing. Time is always a challenge for bloggers, but if you’re in the car two hours a day, audio blogging (podcasting) might be something to consider.

A great option for this would be Gcast, which lets you record a podcast from your cell phone. You simply set up your free account and then when you’re ready to record, you call a toll-free number and start blabbing into your cell (hands free, of course). You’re also able to upload podcasts you’ve recorded from another source, but for easy, on the fly recording, the cell phone option is a good one, I think. Once you’re done, it can be uploaded directly to your blog.

Some possible uses?

  • Record and share audio at meetings, conferences and workshops
  • Record and share interviews with SMEs or with speakers at conferences.
  • Create mini audio lessons that staff can download onto their computers or mp3 players and listen to at their convenience.
  • Document success stories and best practices–in their own words.
  • Have people introduce themselves for an audio employee directory.
  • Have
    learners create audio journal entries
    –maybe describe what they learned
    as the result of a training event or as an ongoing professional
    development activity.
  • Create learning channels–maybe
    a leadership learning channel where you create and share podcasts on
    leadership lessons and issues or a channel for different professions to
    share best practices and ideas.

Here’s a quick guide to using Gcast. This guide is helpful too (PDF).

What do you think? Does podcasting have a place in the blogging for learning toolkit? How do you see something like Gcast working as a blog learning tool?



Blogging and “E-Flective” Practice

The Bamboo Project Blog - Michele Martin - October 17th, 2008

Over at Work Literacy this week, we hosted a great webinar on using blogs for reflective practice. It was run by Paul Lowe, who is a senior lecturer and course director at London College of Communication, University of the Arts London. You can access the recorded session here. Just click on the link and then log in as a participant without a password and it should start playing.

Terry Carter posted a nice summary of the webinar here. Paul’s own reflections on the experience are here and Harold Jarche added some additional thinking here. Unfortunately a client call intervened and I wasn’t able to attend the live version, but I’m planning to go through the recording this week because by all accounts, it was a really engaging discussion.



Blogging for Learning–How To’s

The Bamboo Project Blog - Michele Martin - October 16th, 2008

This week we’re exploring various strategies for using a blog to support personal and formal learning as part of the Work Literacy course’s focus on blogging. Today we’re going to talk about “how to’s” or instructional blogging.

“How to” posts can serve a few purposes in terms of learning.

  • They’re a great tool for assessing skill development. If you can write an effective instructional post, then you’re demonstrating you have an essential understanding of the skills and tools involved in accomplishing the task or activity you’re describing. On an individual level, this can be a check for your own personal learning. If you use “how to” blogging as part of instruction in a course, this allows you as a learning professional to determine if people actually understand and can apply the learning.
  • The process of developing the instructional post actually solidifies learning–it helps learners consolidate different skills and through the process of application, cement the ideas in their brains.
  • Posting a “how to” on a blog invites peer discussion and commentary. You might describe one way to handle a task, but then someone else might offer a tip on how to make some aspect more efficient or effective. The two-way conversational nature of the blog allows you to futher build upon the learning that begin with developing the “how to.”
  • “How to” posts can also serve as a collective resource not only for the learners who post them, but also for others in an organization.

In developing “how to’s,” blogs are really a platform for publishing the information. You can develop written instructions with pictures if that makes sense. But you can also use a tool like Jing to record and post a screencast. You can also record a video demonstration or audio or a VoiceThread presentation. This is one of those areas where choice of presentation method can be a further aide to motivation and learning and blogs lend themselves to using and sharing a variety of engaging media.

Do you use “how to” posts as a tool for personal learning or to support skill development with other learners? How do you use them? What benefits and drawbacks do you see?



Blogging Strategies

elearning Technology - Tony Karrer - October 14th, 2008

The third week of Web 2.0 for Learning Professionals Free Online Course (you can jump in at any time) is all about Blogs for Learning. Interestingly, when I prepared the notes for this week, I was able to leverage what the course members had produced during the previous week on Social Bookmarks:

You can read in the link Blogs for Learning about my perspective on using Blogs for Learning and Networking. There’s a bit in there on blogging strategies, but the reality is that when I go back and look at my previous posts on what your personal strategy should be around blogging, I’m not finding that much. And one of the course members raised a really interesting question in the Forum around blogging strategies:

Matthew, how has blogging changed the way you think? I myself have not had that experience and I’m interested in understanding how it has such an effect on yours. My own experience is that blogging is not very social (even when I have asked for feedback). I have people that follow my blog; I know this from both statcounter and google analytics. However, I have yet to really have “conversations” and feedback except from a few core people.

For me, reading and commenting on blogs (not writing them) gives me the opportunity to learn from others. My own blogging has switched from being an invitation for discussion (which was unsuccessful) to more of a journal of my thoughts as they pop into my head. Before blogging, those thoughts were fleeting. Now they allow me to record the thoughts and expand on them as I experience and learn new things.

The discussion that is following it is quite interesting and I think gets into the heart of what blogging as an experience and as a learning tool is all about. The reality is that as you blog, your blogging strategies are bound to shift.

I recommend looking at Top Ten Reasons To Blog and Top Ten Not to Blog and also:

Love to get comments in the Forum around this.



Blogging for Learning: Blog Challenges

The Bamboo Project Blog - Michele Martin - October 14th, 2008

Lego blogger
This week we’re exploring various strategies for using a blog to support personal and formal learning as part of the Work Literacy course’s focus on blogging.  Today we’re going to discuss running a blog challenge.

What is a Blog Challenge?
In a blog challenge, several  bloggers work together on a group learning project over a period of time–a few days, a week, a month. Each day during the challenge, learning activities are posted for bloggers to engage in and then blog about. Challenge participants also visit and comment on each others blogs to provide feedback and support during the challenge. The 31-Day Comment Challenge and the 31 Days to Building a Better Blog were both examples of blog challenges.

Benefits of a Blog Challenge Format
The Challenge format has a lot of benefits as a learning project:

  • It builds a sense of group cohesiveness and connection as people work together on learning a particular topic. This is enhanced by the intensity of focusing for several days or weeks on a specific theme.
  • It allows learners to explore various aspects of a learning theme, comparing and contrasting different ideas and methods over a period of time.
  • It encourages experimentation and exploration. Each day there’s a different activity for learners to try.
  • Many people love the challenge concept–it engages them in focusing intensely on a learning area and depending on how the challenge is structured, it can get their competitive juices flowing. 
  • Well-structured challenges are fun, especially if you bring prizes into the mix.


Organizing a Challenge

The first step in getting started with a challenge is to pick a topic. This is pretty wide-open territory because just about any area can lend itself to a blog challenge. However it’s best to pick something that’s broad enough for you to identify several different activities that are related to the theme.

Deciding on the amount of time for your challenge is another key decision. Both Challenges that I’ve run here have been month-long activities. Although both were very successful, I’ve come to believe that in most cases, 31 days is too long for this kind of thing. I’d suggest at most 2 weeks, and probably an ideal strategy would be to do week-long challenges. This is enough time for people to get into it, but not so long that the challenge begins to feel like a chore.

Blogging
The Activities

At the heart of a blog challenge is a set of daily activities related to the theme of the challenge. What I’ve found works best is to have a mixture of different kinds of activities. Some are concrete, specific tasks like “comment on a colleague’s blog” or “try out the active listening technique with one customer.” Usually learners will then blog about what happened as a result of that specific activity.

You can also include activities such as having learners:

  • Read a brief article or blog post and respond with their own thoughts.
  • Develop a set of instructions for accomplishing a specific task.
  • Respond to a “big question,” such as “What does leadership mean to you?” or “What’s the best way to sell XYZ product?”
  • Respond to questions asked by their colleagues
  • Research a topic and provide links to relevant resources.

Think carefully about how you structure and organize your activities. I’ve found that it’s a good idea to mix different types of activities throughout the challenge and to allow a lot of flexibility in terms of how people respond to the activities. For example, if you’re going to have them develop a set of instructions to do a specific task, encourage them to try out using more creative tools to express themselves, like VoiceThread or putting a PPT onto Slideshare. The best activities have both structure and some level of choice for learners.

I’ve also found that it’s a good idea for Challenge organizers to be flexible in coming up with activities. In the Comment Challenge, I watched what people were doing and where they had questions and concerns to adapt the activities accordingly. When it looked like people needed a break, we did a “catch-up” day. We also had participants contribute some of their own challenge ideas and added those to the activity list.

At the end of the challenge, be sure to include at least one activity that asks learners to somehow summarize what they’ve learned. How did the experience change their practices? What three things did they take away from the activities?

Running the Challenge
The challenges that I’ve run here have both been “open”–I interacted with bloggers from all over the world, as opposed to bloggers within a particular organization. Personally I found that openness to be one of the key advantages of the challenge format–we had people with different perspectives and approaches responding to the activities, which opened up some interesting discussions about what we were doing. If at all possible and appropriate for your topic, I strongly encourage making challenges as open as possible.

In terms of logistics, I used my blog to post each day’s activities.This gave people something to look forward to each day, plus they could use RSS to subscribe to the feed. If they had questions, they could ask them in comments on the post. They could also leave links to their own posts so that everyone else could see what they were doing.

For the Comment Challenge we  set up a wiki where we could keep track of the participants, the entire month of activities, etc. This also allowed us to have a central location for people to find instructions on how to participate.

Conversation
Encouraging Interaction and Participation

One of the primary benefits of blog challenges is the ability to build up group connection and interaction. It’s important to have a mechanism for participants to be able to find each other. Select a unique tag and have learners tag their posts with it. You can then embed the Technorati feed to that tag in your own blog or in a wiki.

Technorati can be a pain, though, so I’ve also had people use Delicious  to tag and save their posts and then participants could subscribe to that tag feed or, again, it could be embedded in a blog or wiki.

Encourage people to interact with and comment on each others blog posts. In part, this can be done through the daily activities. For each daily activity, for example, include visiting someone else’s blog and commenting. If that doesn’t encourage interaction, set aside a day for people to somehow interact with another blogger, such as “visit your colleague’s blogs and identify the top three ideas for solving a problem” or “go to a colleague’s blog and answer one of their questions.”

It’s also a good idea to have at least one facilitator who is reading all blog posts and helping to connect learners to each other by noticing and commenting on common threads, contrasting ideas, etc. This helps connect learners to one another as well as helping to connect the different strands of thinking and learning that are happening. 

One thing I would strongly encourage is to engage your participants in some process evaluation as the challenge goes on, particularly if you’ve decided on a challenge that runs for more than a week. Find out what people feel is and isn’t working so you can make adjustments accordingly. Try to find out where the energy and engagement is and see how you can build on that. Social media is, in many ways, more of an organic, from the ground up tool. You have to watch where the seeds are taking root and be alert to opportunities to nurture that growth.

Ending a Blog Challenge

As part of concluding a blog challenge, a few things I’d suggest:

  • Invite learners to develop a summary of what was learned and how they will apply it. This is an area where you could invite a lot of creativity–people could record audio or video, create a slide presentation, etc.
  • Write your own summary post of what was learned. What were your observations about the experience? What key issues and questions emerged? 
  • Recognize participants. If you decided to use prizes as part of the process, now’s the time to award them. For the Comment Challenge, we had participants nominate and vote on people in several categories. This can be another way to extend the learning as people reflect on what they considered to be quality work during the challenge.
  • Get feedback. Use an online poll to find out what participants did and didn’t like about the challenge format. Particularly if it’s your first time, you’ll find that you may need to refine what you’re doing. 

Although a blog challenge requires more planning and structure than other strategies for learning with blogs, they can also be really powerful learning experiences. What experiences have you had with blog challenges? Have you run one yourself? What tips do you have for participating or managing a challenge?

Photos via minifig, suerichards and netzkobold.



Blogging for Learning–Using Quotes

The Bamboo Project Blog - Michele Martin - October 13th, 2008

Quotes
This week on Work Literacy, we’re exploring how to use blogs for personal learning and as part of more structured formal events with learners.  I haven’t done a week-long series in a while, so I thought it would be fun to spend this week sharing different kinds of activities that could be used to support learning with blogs.

Today we’re going to talk about how we could use quotes as a springboard to learning through blogs. This is an activity that you could do for your own personal development or that you could use with a class.


Write a Quote Post
The basic premise is pretty simple–you’re going to use the quote as a springboard to posting, essentially a writing prompt to explore further thinking.

  • Find a list of relevant quotes. If you’re doing this for personal development, then search for quotes pertaining to the area that you want to focus on. If you’re doing this with a class, then find quotes related to the theme or topic of the class.  At the bottom of this post, I’ve included some links to quote sites you might want to explore.
  • Select one or more quotes that you agree with or that you disagree with or that somehow reflect a learning point you’re exploring. You could also select several quotes that perhaps are in conflict with each other or that somehow complement each other and then blog about those. 
  • Write a  blog post considering why you agree or disagree or how you could use the quote to think about future action. If you select multiple quotes, write about how they might work together to make your learning point.

Comment on a Quote
If you’re using the quote concept as a tool for formal learning, you could use your own blog to post a quote and then ask learners to use commenting to respond to the quote. As comments develop, the learners can also respond to what other learners are saying.

Quotable You
In a twist on the quoting concept, you could also come up with your own quote related to a particular theme or topic.  Write it in a blog post. Try to capture the essence of the learning theme.

Quote Board
For a formal learning event, write a blog post asking people to share their favorite quotes on your learning theme. Have them post their quotes in the comments section of your blog post. Encourage them to comment on the quotes posted by others, too.  This could be a good icebreaker for an online course.

Quote Resources
Here are some sites where you can find quote prompts.

  • Despair.com–This is the world’s greatest source of “de-motivational” quotes and it never fails to crack me up. For a change of pace, visit the demotivators and find one to use as your quote prompt. Particularly good for exploring issues like teambuilding and leadership.

What are other ways you could use quotes for learning with blogs? Write your own post or leave me a comment.

Photo via Mr. Bren