Archiving course posts and comments: Difference between revisions
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When all the URL's are submitted he will start the archiving. After a few minutes he is done. Now it is possible to browse all the blog posts and comments inside EduFeedr. Also the bookmarks from Delicious and photos from Flickr were archived. Unfortunately EduFeedr wasn’t able to download content from web sites that have a Flash player for displaying the content (YouTube, SlideShare and others). For these environments only links to the course-related content are saved in the archive. | When all the URL's are submitted he will start the archiving. After a few minutes he is done. Now it is possible to browse all the blog posts and comments inside EduFeedr. Also the bookmarks from Delicious and photos from Flickr were archived. Unfortunately EduFeedr wasn’t able to download content from web sites that have a Flash player for displaying the content (YouTube, SlideShare and others). For these environments only links to the course-related content are saved in the archive. | ||
==Comments== | ==Questions about the scenario== | ||
==Comments from the readers== |
Revision as of 00:02, 4 May 2009
Scenario
John has completed a course where all the students were using their personal blogs to post the weekly assignments. Besides blogs the students were using various Web 2.0 sites to share the course-related information. These sites include Delicious, SlideShare, Scribd, Flickr and YouTube. In all of these sites the students used the same tag with course-related content.
John is really happy with the way how active the students were during the course. However, he is worried that part of the course-related content will be taken down over the time. He would like to have an offline copy of all the student blogs and course-related activities in other Web 2.0 environments. Saving these web pages manually is far too much work.
John finds out that he can use EduFeedr for making an archive of the course. URL's for all the student blogs have been already added to EduFeedr. Now John has to add URL's for the pages that aggregate all content with course tag from Delicious, SlideShare and other Web 2.0 environments that they used.
When all the URL's are submitted he will start the archiving. After a few minutes he is done. Now it is possible to browse all the blog posts and comments inside EduFeedr. Also the bookmarks from Delicious and photos from Flickr were archived. Unfortunately EduFeedr wasn’t able to download content from web sites that have a Flash player for displaying the content (YouTube, SlideShare and others). For these environments only links to the course-related content are saved in the archive.