My Blogging Projects
I have several blogging projects underway. Each is described below. Please contact me if you have any questions about these initiatives.
Dangerously Irrelevant
Dangerously Irrelevant is my primary blog and currently is my most visible venture into the blogosphere. Dangerously Irrelevant was the first blog in the country to really focus on technology leadership issues for P-12 administrators. The blog is available at www.dangerouslyirrelevant.org
LeaderTalk
LeaderTalk is a CASTLE project and is the first group blog by school leaders for school leaders. LeaderTalk contributors include superintendents, principals, educational leadership faculty, central office administrators, and other school leadership folks. The blog is available at www.leadertalk.org. LeaderTalk welcomes new voices; contact me if you are interested in being a contributor to the blog.
At the Schoolhouse Gate
At the Schoolhouse Gate, a.k.a. "The Gate," is a CASTLE project focused on school law issues. The Gate is intended to be a space where news items, commentary, opinions, reports, and other education law materials can coalesce together into a meaningful resource for administrators, professors, and attorneys. The blog is available at www.schoolhousegate.org. The Gate welcomes new voices; contact me if you are interested in being a contributor to the blog.
CASTLE Conversations
CASTLE Conversations is a CASTLE project intended to highlight interesting work done by people that have expertise and are doing interesting things but may not have much national or online visibility. We interview interesting people on topics related to technology and/or school leadership and then make those interviews freely available through the blog. The blog is available at www.castleconversations.org
Principal Blogging Project
The Principal Blogging Project is a CASTLE project intended to help principals understand the power and potential of blogs as communication tools. We are creating free blogs for any principals that want to try out blogging with their local communities (we've also made a few for central office and other folks). To date we've created nearly 100 blogs. More information about the project is available at http://principalblogs.jot.com

