Tuesday, June 9, 2015

Matching technology to visions and goals and vice versa

In the past, the journalism class I will teach next year taught skills associated with broadcast journalism, but when given the opportunity to take over the class, I decided to create a news magazine to provide students greater access to the different moving parts that make up our community. Because media often provides a unifying experience, I hope this publication will provide members of the community with the opportunity to celebrate and support one another. However, my biggest fear is an inability to facilitate this access, and I see two obstacles I will have to overcome—one short-term and one long-term—to ensure exposure of our content.

The Communicator's aesthetically pleasing front page design. 
Most immediately, I find myself struggling to decide which container we will use—whether it will be SNO or just Word Press or Google Sites (which would not be my first choice)—and to what degree what I choose will support or restrict my vision for the magazine’s design. I also wonder how the aesthetic choices my staff and I make and the multimedia, features-style vision I have will affect traffic.


I'd like to incorporate technology similar to what is used by The Muse. 
Long term, the success of any digital endeavor hinges on technology, and using what is available and cutting edge is important. Ensuring my students know how to use what is available and to become so comfortable they can create multimedia projects for publication as well. Furthermore, I am convinced that eventually we need an app to deliver content. In the meantime, I will continue to cultivate relationships with people who know more than me in the hopes that I will, one day, achieve this particular goal.

Carver Weakley
Cosby High School
Midlothian, Virginia

8 comments:

  1. I have had great success with SNO. The customer service offered when things have gone "wrong" has been critical. This year my site crashed as a result of a plugin. Essentially, the site had to be rebuilt. Even if I had the technological know-how to rebuild the site, I certainly didn't have the patience nor the time to get the site up and running again. Unless you have other backup—students or on-campus personnel who can help—I would recommend SNO. It's a peace of mind you don't get with WordPress. (And you seem to already know Google Sites' limitations.) Just my two cents.

    Kris Urban
    Corona del Sol High School
    Tempe, Ariz.

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  2. This doesn't help with all of your challenge, but you'll have a chance to use SNO while you're here. In years past SNO offered Reynolds Institute participants a discount on the setup fee. Please remind me when you're here and I'll check that with folks there. Like Kris, I've found SNO a breeze to work with. I just reengineered the site layout this afternoon, and it took only a few minutes.

    Steve Elliott
    Arizona State University
    Phoenix

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  4. I am excited about the opportunity for my students to use SNO because I have heard nothing but positive things about it. Our problem will be securing the funds to be able to afford their services. Steve is correct in stating that they offer a discount. In the information I received in the mail Kari Koshoil said we will receive a $100 discount off the website setup fee ($300) because we attended the Reynolds Institute. However, we must sign up by August 15, 2015, and enter in code: SNOTASTIC on the order form. I am seriously considering requiring my students to pay a $40 lab fee this year to cover the cost of using SNO to build and host our website. Last year we did not have very much of a social presence online. I started a Twitter page and required them to Tweet about their stories and events around the school. This was a good start but we need to work on building a better online presence. I believe SNO will help us a lot with this goal.

    Bernice Young
    Oakleaf High School
    Orange Park, Florida

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  5. Our school newspaper has used SNO for the last few years, and it's what they had when I picked it up as adviser this last year. It seems to work really well for my students as a user friendly site, and I haven't seen any major problems with how it works.
    The weaknesses I've seen with our online news site is that my students don't publish often enough, and the site becomes stale very quickly. I'm trying to figure out how to best ameliorate that without killing myself as adviser with too much of their work coming in. I would also like to develop an app, but I have no idea where to start with that. I would love any ideas.

    Emily Sell
    Bingham High School
    South Jordan, UT

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  6. I just feel the need to add my voice to those who like SNO. I can't say we're experts on it yet at my school, but we've had nothing but speedy and kind customer service and it's great to see such a professional looking site when you have limitations when it comes to coding and the technology you would otherwise need to make something that looks so nice!

    Keith Carlson
    Naperville Central high School
    Naperville, Ill.

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  7. I use Wordpress for our news site, partially because it was apart of my capstone project so I had to learn how to use it. I also used WP because my capstone advisor helped me prototype a web app that I could push out to my phone using X-code 6. I've run across a few problems on my personal portfolio site with WP, but I have a coworker who helped me figure it out. I'm considering switching over to SNO, so I'm going to research them and see if my school will be able to help with funding it.

    Victoria Tijerina
    Moises E Molina High School
    Dallas, Texas

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