I’ve hardly posted to micro.blog in a week but it seems I open it quite often. Reading micro.blog has become a relaxation & inspiration. The more thoughtful nature of the community, & posting to my own site, means I don’t fire off so many posts.

Reposted Back to the classroom – Ian Stuart – Medium by Ian Stuart (Medium)
Now I have a request…… who would like to collaborate to develop Notebooks for courses? I must admit I tried to do this previously but the teaching community were at the early stage of becoming familiar with the technology. I feel this has moved on. So going to try again and use what I have learned. Drop me a message and lets start collaborating and sharing the workload.

Ian Stuart returns to the classroom, which can only be a good thing for the school. He is looking for some collaboration.

I worked with Ian at Glow and his knowledge of  and enthusiasm for OneNote is amazing. A great opportunity for D&T collaboration.

Replied to INTERTEXTrEVOLUTION by Greg McVerryGreg McVerry (jgregorymcverry.com)
Reduced post to micro.blog by trying to be intentional as I play. Assume folks who want know have me in readers. And syndicated replies or threaded conversations from other networks make little sense. Wonder if this is better approach of if all the content goes everywhere.

Hi Greg,

i think it is a better way. I am trying to do that here. My main RSS feed doesn’t have status formatted post. Only post categorised micro go to microblog (I think I’ll change to just using categories soon).  The category for this post ‘reactions’ doesn’t go anywhere, unless I forget to take off publicise to google or post to Twitter via The friction should help with the intentionality.

It gets complicated as replies through micro.blog don’t, as yet, get posted here and replies here don’t point, AFAIK, at a particular micro.blog post.