January 04, 2007

edweek.org Redesign Launches

Dear Readers,

As you have probably noticed, over the holidays we launched a redesign of our web site, edweek.org. Last Summer, we applied a similar update to the Teacher Magazine site, teachermagazine.org, and now we have carried many of the same design concepts over to the site of our flagship publication Education Week — including additional features and enhancements which will migrate back to the Teacher site once we're finished. There are a few additional features and tweaks scheduled to roll out over the coming weeks. After that, we plan to finish the job, updating our "about" and Research Center pages later this Winter, and finally updating the look of Agent K-12 as part of a general upgrade of its software and user interface.

Features in the redesign include:

  • a wider display, allowing users to see more content in the browser window;
  • new article tools, to enable sharing with friends or via news tagging or bookmarking sites;
  • additional community content from blogs and comments featured on the home page;
  • more prominent placement of multimedia content on the home page and throughout the site;
  • a cleaner, easier to read design, and more consistent navigation; and
  • a list of our most popular articles, updated daily.

We hope you like what you see, and encourage you to let us know what you think, by either posting a comment below, or sending email to webeditors@epe.org.

Sincerely,

Paul Hyland
Executive Producer, edweek.org

October 06, 2006

A Former Mennonite Reports on the Amish

I was reporting on an education conference in a downtown Washington hotel when I noticed TV monitors in the lobby were turned on to CNN and Fox news and broadcasters were reporting on an attack on a one-room Amish schoolhouse in Lancaster County, Pa. My first thought was, “What is our society coming to when violence erupts among the Amish, who want to be left alone by the world and live as peacefully as possible?” The Amish have a long tradition of nonviolence, such as refusing to participate in the military.

In the news reports, it soon became clear that several Amish girls had been killed, and that the killer was not Amish. I was so distressed that several children had died in another school shooting that I wanted to go home and crawl into bed. Instead I called the Education Week office asking for a chance to write about how Amish educators might respond to the tragedy. “I know a lot about the Amish,” I said in the phone message to my editor, “I grew up in a town with 1,000 Amish families living around it. And my parents rent a farm to an Amish family.”

I didn’t remind my editor that I was raised Mennonite. In Europe, a group of Anabaptists that became known as the Amish broke away from the Mennonites in 1693, but the two Christian denominations still have some common beliefs and cooperate on service work. Actually I don’t call myself Mennonite anymore, because I’ve attended other kinds of churches for a number of years, but I still feel rooted in my Mennonite upbringing, which includes a sense that both Mennonites and Amish are often not understood well by people outside their communities.

What I didn’t want to do was go up to Lancaster County and become part of the media pack trying to get access to Amish. But I saw an opening to explain to our readers more about who the Amish are.

My article was based mostly on interviews with Mennonites, who get degrees in higher education and don’t reject “worldly” ways nearly to the same extent that the Amish do. Mennonites often become spokespeople for Amish in times of crisis. I’ve noticed this in the coverage of the shootings at the Amish school this last week. A Mennonite midwife talks to the Washington Post about some of the experiences of the girls in the West Nickel Mines School on that awful day. An Amish-turned-Mennonite who works for Eastern Mennonite University in Harrisonburg, Va., talks to the press about what Amish funerals are like.

Donald B. Kraybill, a sociology professor at Elizabethtown College in Elizabethtown, Pa., who grew up Mennonite and now attends a Brethren church, has spent his career interpreting the faith and culture of Amish and other Anabaptist groups to the outside world. Mr. Kraybill was one of the most sought after experts to talk about the Amish last week, and he comes across as respectful of Amish ways. John Hostetler, who was raised Amish and became Mennonite as a young man, also contributed much to the world’s understanding of the Amish with his scholarship published from the 1960s to the late 1980s.

I don’t know how the Amish feel about the work of these scholars, but in my view they’ve offered a much richer picture of the Amish than the movie “Witness,” which got more play than the scholars' books.

In the end, I wrote an article for Education Week citing Mr. Kraybill’s understanding of why the Amish school is the most protected area of Amish life in terms of technology. The Amish may use cellular phones in some of their businesses, but they aren’t likely to try to increase security by placing them in the schoolroom, he said. That article, “In the Wake of Shootings, Amish Schools Not Likely to Boost Security, Experts Say,” and an article by my colleague, Lesli Maxwell, “Bush Calls Summit on School Shootings,” which tells about political leaders’ pledges to tighten security, were published on www.edweek.org on Oct. 5, and will be coming out in print in the Oct. 11 issue of Education Week.

October 05, 2006

Digital Photography

Most professional photographers began shooting with digital cameras before the year 2000. I was a late-comer, finally buying in February 2001. By then, the pressure to turn around assignments within a couple of hours made using film impossible. Editors at daily newspapers have come to expect images in-house within an hour or so of an assignment ending—whether the assignment is in the same city or 3,000 miles away.

The accelerated pace of delivering news affects everyone in a newsroom. Photographers, though, are in a great position to adapt to technological changes. We are gear people. We are techie-obsessed by necessity. The photo world even created a digi-specific photo term: "chimping"—which means previewing images on the camera back LCD screen after taking a photo. It's controversial behavior in the photo world. Pro photo rule says: more chimping means less experience and more insecurity. Plus, if you are busy looking down, you’ll miss the Pulitzer Prize-winning moment. Others say the technology is there, why not check exposure and edit in real time? Check out SportsShooter on "Chimping: How and Why?"

How Does the Digital World Affect Photo Editing at Education Week?

The photo department is small. For every 10 reporters there is one photo staff member. With such an inverted ratio, we can’t possibly use staff photographers for every story. We rely on hiring freelance photographers and using photo agency images.

The print version of Education Week is a weekly with rolling deadlines starting a week before the cover date (on Wednesdays) with the entire paper going to press by noon Fridays. Digital image workflow has cut image processing time by one full working day. Eight hours! I started working at Education Week two years ago. Even by then, all assignments were digital.

What About Photos and edweek.org?

In film days, without a larger photo staff or gigantic budget, providing daily photo content for online use would have been near impossible. The worldwide digital workflow means we can move from weekly to daily photo-gathering mode almost seamlessly.

With more space available online, we have the flexibility of using additional photos with stories that don’t fit into a print layout. And the addition of multimedia projects gives us more ways to tell a story. To that end, the photo department recently bought some sound gear for collecting audio on assignments. One microphone mounts to the top of the camera and points out—creating a decidedly "photographer as unicorn" profile.

From a photo perspective, online is a good place for us to stretch our creativity—both visually and on the technology front.

Sarah Evans
Director of Photography

September 25, 2006

The Edweek Exchange

Got something to say? We know you do. That's why we post a TalkBack online discussion forum with at least one commentary in every issue of Education Week. We're also planning to let readers post comments to all Education Week articles. We want to know what interests our readers, and we consider TalkBack one gauge of popular interest. But maybe it's not a good yardstick. Maybe you don't have time to participate even if the topic does interest you. Maybe the people who post responses are only those who like to hear themselves talk (or type...).

As we've mentioned before, we're working to add even more multimedia storytelling to the site-via podcasts, photogalleries, and audio segments. Besides reading and watching education news, talking about educational issues with other readers may be even more productive. Our online chats give you a chance to send questions to featured guests, including policy wonks, researchers, educators and members of the media, and read their answers live or in our chat transcripts. We hope that our "In Other News" blog will give you an enticing taste of some of the slightly offbeat stories and goings-on we may not include in our regular coverage. TalkBacks provide the opportunity to discuss issues with other readers. Comments on every article would expand on this, giving you the chance to respond to any article you wanted. Would this be helpful? Or just distracting? We're curious.

Some people say technology is creating a more isolated world where every interaction is separated by two monitors, a keyboard, a mouse, a video screen. This type of removed conversation may be instantaneous, critics say, but it's less meaningful, less personal. Plus, who can resist the smell of fresh newsprint, the definitive turning of a page, the rustle of a creased paper, the safe place to rest your coffee mug on your desk or kitchen table? We know it's hard to compete with old faithful, The Printed Word. But, the way we see it, we're not competing, we're enhancing. Edweek.org is your touchstone, your town square, a place to voice your opinions and meet with the rest of the education community. So enjoy your weekly fill of education news with paper in hand. But, when you're done, stop by for some conversation. Raise your hand, pass a note, talkback.

And thanks for dropping by.

Rebekah Lewis
Online Producer
Edweek.org

September 14, 2006

Getting Creative With Content: Podcasting

Podcasting. Heard of it? Maybe you have (it's been in popular use since 2004). Do you know what it means? You probably do have a fair idea by now, but this link will help you out, too. Do you know how to create a podcast? This might be more of a test, but don't worry, we're not entirely sure ourselves yet, although we're a lot closer to knowing than we were six days ago.

I recently attended the inaugural PodCamp in Boston to glean as much information as possible about podcasting; how to produce them, how to choose good content, and how to get them out to your public. We are working to produce a podcast for edweek.org subscribers that would provide you with content from all areas of our site, as well as milking the knowledge and expertise of the more than 30 staff writers, editors, and producers working here at EPE towers.

Of course, before we crank out the podcast, we need a solid idea for good content. That's where you come in. Yes you, our readers. What would you most like to hear from an edweek.org podcast? We have some ideas of our own, but you are the ones who would be listening to the show, so if you have ideas, please forward them to me at cstone@epe.org. If you want to sample other news podcasts as a taster, here are some picks:

CNN
MSNBC; and
• Jim Lehrer's NewHour podcast.

For the past five years I have produced most of the audio on the edweek.org site, and I believe podcasting is our next step to further enhance our product. No longer will you have to be at your computer to read, listen, or view a news story or feature from edweek.org. Our idea is for you to be able to take edweek.org with you in the car, or on the bus, train, or even along on the short walk, or hard run home from the office.

As my colleague Cheri notes below, we at edweek.org strive to deliver content to our users in ways that are innovative but, more importantly, useful. This past year we have added an RSS feed to the site, produced video content to accompany stories, added various blogs, and continued to provide creative audio and photo galleries to enhance Education Week stories and edweek.org original content.

Quite soon, the edweek.org podcast will add to this mix.
Cheers

Craig Stone
Senior Online Producer
Edweek.org

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