Learning spaces need to create environments where self-direction thrives, not rely on a myth of self direction to avoid designing community.
Category Archives: enviable stuff
I’ve been a fan of Display Posts since the days of straight Non-Programistan. Despite the fact that I can write my own stuff from scratch, Display Posts still comes in handy all the time. The following are just two little tricks used in a recent course site. I’m just skimming the surface of the ...
Another fan of display-posts-shortcode. My favourite plugin on Glow Blogs.
“I changed the way I teach new vocabulary. Fewer words, slower process, more effortful, but better understanding and use. #engchat #pypchat”
I changed the way I teach new vocabulary.
Fewer words, slower process, more effortful, but better understanding and use. #engchat #pypchat pic.twitter.com/JaXCExU1pY— Cristina Milos (@surreallyno) January 3, 2020
Canvas cards
Canvas Cards is a gallery of card designs created with javasript canvas. Updated every week in 2019, each card includes an editable code block so feel free to tweak and make your own designs.
Making Canvas Cards Looks fascinating

This is the foundation of the new WordPress editor. Take atomic pieces, and combine them to make whole sections and layouts. Best yet, no fumbling with floats if you want to put some text next to an image!
A nice example of what Gutenberg can do. I am not using it here, the old editor suits me and supports all of the IndieWeb plugins. It will answer some of the requests we have on Glow Blogs when it arrive there.
“It's getting harder to simply look at web pages, when they are encrusted with multiple layers of this stuff:”
Yup
“Since Iain Duncan Smith is getting a knighthood, here's an open letter I wrote for him back in 2015 https://t.co/4EJHqZtn5F”
Powerful liked article:
James McEnaney: An open letter to Iain Duncan Smith – meet Michael, my brother | CommonSpace
2019 in Review: Blog Reading

I’ve often made an end of year posts reviewing my blogging. I though this year I might review my blog reading. These are a few of the sites I’ve enjoyed. The blogs I try not to miss and some I would love to be able to emulate.
Cogdog blog. Alan’s blog has been a constant in my life for years. Discussing sharing, sharing WordPress code and more wrapped in a real life with a real voice. I follow Alan wherever he roams.
Read Write Collect is my main education hosepipe filter. Aaron reads and comments on a huge range of educational and web tech blogs wrapped in a tasty IndieWeb coating.
I spend more time on the gentle, eclectic Micro.blog community/aggregator than social networks nowadays. @smokey is a one man community engine nearly every week he produces a post with a list of posts and pictures he has picked out. A few of us tried this for a while, as far as I know @smokey is the only one to have kept it up.
I love Tom Woodward’s Weekly Web Harvest which I think might be auto generated from pinboard. The rest of the blog certainly isn’t auto generated but is a must read too.
Tom Smith, I follow across twitter, Instagram and now his blog. Creative Chaos.
ScotEduBlogs, an aggregation of Scottish Educational bloggers. I run this as a gift to the community, but also because it means it is easy to read great stuff from across Scottish education at all levels.
I read a lot more via RSS. My twitter browsing has decreased but I have a couple of private lists one called regular & one for primary classroom folk.
I continue to find some really good resources on twitter. I do wish more of the teachers sharing would use a blog. (much easier to keep track of, organise etc). If they are in Scotland they could join in ScotEduBlogs too.
Featured image from Image from page 285 of “Studies in reading; teacher’s manual” (1919) on flickr no known copyright restrictions.
“*WIP* Ghostly being #threejs #webgl #glsl #creativecoding https://t.co/MO0jWo6k0t”
*WIP* Ghostly being#threejs #webgl #glsl #creativecoding pic.twitter.com/MO0jWo6k0t
— Douglas Lilliequist (@DougLilliequist) November 24, 2019
Cool