Education Blogs
Below is a list of education blogs the Curriki development team regularly follows. If you would like to tell us about an education blog, click here. To view the education communities Curriki follows, click here. Check out Curriki's new blog!http://web.mac.com/iajukes/thecommittedsardine/BLOG/BLOG.html
Join Ian Jukes as he discusses education, technology and teaching for the 21st century. He writes. “Noted anthropologist Margaret Mead once wrote ‘never doubt that a small group of committed people can change the world - indeed it is the only thing that ever has.’ That's why we're Committed Sardines. The Committed Sardine Blog… Thinking outside the can.”
http://www.eduwonk.com
Eduwonk contains education news and commentary by Andrew Rotherham, co-founder and co-director of Education Sector.
http://publiceducationdefender.blogspot.com/
Dennis Fermoyle is the author of In The Trenches: A Teacher’s Defense of Public Education, and has been a public school teacher for over 30 years. "His views are based on real experience and they contain the much needed common sense that education critics and reformers often lack."
http://www.infinitethinking.org
"The Infinite Thinking Machine (ITM) is designed to help teachers and students thrive in the 21st century. Through an active blog, an Internet TV show, and other media resources, the ITM shares a 'bazillion practical ideas' for turning the infinite universe of information into knowledge."
http://jkrbooks.typepad.com/blog
Updating almost daily, this blog contains book reviews for hundreds of children’s books. Robinson’s goal is, "promoting the love of books by children, and the continued reading of children’s books by adults."
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/learning-the-language
Authored by Mary Ann Zehr, Assistant Editor for Education Week, this blog discusses the latest policies and news with regard to the schooling of English-Language Learners.
http://www.pbs.org/teachers/learning.now/
Learning.now, hosted by Andy Carvin, is "a weblog that explores how new technology and Internet culture affect how educators teach and children learn. It will offer a continuing look at how new technology such as wikis, blogs, vlogs, RSS, podcasts, social networking sites, and the always-on culture of the Internet are impacting teacher and students' lives both inside and out of the classroom."
http://www.stevehargadon.com/
Follow along with Steve Hargadon as he discusses, “K-12 Educational Technology: Web 2.0, Free and Open Source Software, and the Future of Education.”
http://weblogg-ed.com/
A blog about new technologies in K-12 education with an eye towards making technology accessible to all teachers. Author Will Richardson writes, “This site is dedicated to discussions and reflections on the use of Weblogs, wikis, RSS, audiocasts and other Read/Write Web related technologies in the K-12 realm, technologies that are transforming classrooms around the world.”

