“Character Education” with quotes.
There are people in the world who think that their world vision is better than yours. People allow their cultural and societal norms to dictate… Read More »“Character Education” with quotes.
There are people in the world who think that their world vision is better than yours. People allow their cultural and societal norms to dictate… Read More »“Character Education” with quotes.
At some point, you look at your blog and wonder “Is any of this still useful?” The answer is yes, yes it is. Through the… Read More »Step by Step: Making Your Blog More Useful
TL;DR My last day at Mozilla already happened, but I’m still me. I bring together disparate things to foster learning, spread openness and design for… Read More »What’s next for Laura?
Missing context? Catch up with recent posts tagged with “Methods & Theories”. A couple weeks ago, in the Open Web Leadership call we talked about… Read More »Collapsing Open Leadership Strands
Most of this post will be much easier to understand if you view Mark’s recent talk at the Next Billion in London, skim or reread… Read More »Mozilla Academy Thoughts
Here’s another stab at trying to nail down the competencies and topics leaders in the open community need to have and an organizing structure for… Read More »Iterating organizing structures
Over the last couple of weeks, we’ve been talking about an organizing structure for future (and current) Teach Like Mozilla content and curriculum. This stream… Read More »Open Web Leadership
After fruitful conversations around open fluency and making a commitment (next call April 30th) to think about what that means, while in parallel producing leadership… Read More »Producing Teach Like Mozilla in the Open (with YOU!)
I’ve been thinking about lenses on the Web Literacy Map again. Specifically the “Leadership” component of what we do at Mozilla. In his post, Mark… Read More »Open Fluency
Yesterday I got to hangout with the #DMLCommons folks in the blog garage (complete with tools) to talk about our views on blogging. In that… Read More »On the Archive