Making Miracles in the Blogosphere

With so many people in need, so many problems in the world, how do you pick the things you give to, the people you help? I tend to pick organizatons that I think will do something I approve of with my money: Global Giving, Heifer International and the like. One woman decided to get very specific on her blog and she managed to help raise enough money to allow some friends of hers to avoid foreclosure and stay in their home.

The original post asking for donations was on blackperson, the blog of Jaki Grier. She asked for 10,000 people to donate one dollar each. That’s all her friends Daniel and Ebony Sampson needed to catch up on their mortgage and not be ousted from their home at a time when Daniel had lost his job due to illness. The Sampsons are from Aberdeen, Maryland.

The story hit the major media after the money had been collected. Media reported the event as a Christmas miracle. Blog ‘miracle’ saves Christmas for hard-luck family at CNN is a good example. You can get most of the background information from this one story at CNN. The local media in Baltimore aired the story, which you can see at WBALTV.

One aspect of the story that I love is only mentioned in passing in the media reports. That is the fact that once the money needed had been donated, Grier took the PayPal donation button down from her blog. The total needed was $10,000. Grier took down the button when the donations reached a little over $11,000. I like that nobody got greedy, nobody tried to take advantage of the generous souls who were helping the Sampsons stay in their home. They accepted just enough and no more. And, Daniel Sampson got a job interview from someone who heard about the story.

When Grier posted the update to the story, We saved their home! she said,

In five days, with everyone’s help, we raised over $10,000! . . . I’ve taken the Paypal button down. My goal was never to make a profit, only to help my friends reach their goal. So, thank you all so very very much for your help and support.

The power of Jaki Grier’s plea at blackperson was amplified by other bloggers, who heard about the story and encouraged readers to donate.

One helpful blog post was Shakesville’s The Power of Teaspoons, who said,

one of its [the blogospheres] best bits is the ability of bloggers and blog readers to pull together to help someone out.

ginmar asked her readers to give a dollar.

Spread it around, would you? Just a buck, maybe a little more.

This story inspired me this holiday season to try for a “miracle” for my friend Carrie. Carrie is a massage therapist who spends her days making other people feel better. Recently she had oral surgery for a tumor on her jaw. The tumor turned out to be benign, but it also turned out to be agressive and invasive and is still growing, even after the surgery.

They want to do two more surgeries. One to remove the rest of the tumor and a good-sized hunk of her jaw. Later, they want to rebuild the jaw using bone from her leg. She has a rare condition called desmoplastic ameloblastoma. When I say rare, I mean rare. Only 54 cases have been reported, according to an article in the Journal of Oral Pathology and Medicine.

Carrie has no health insurance. Like the Sampsons foreclosure problem, Carrie’s lack of insurance is an all-too-common problem these days. She has a job, but she only makes money when she’s able to give a massage, and when you’re laid up for several weeks recovering from three surgeries, you don’t give massages. Even if she worked all day, every day, she wouldn’t have enough money to cover three surgeries. Add “rare condition” to that and it sounds even more difficult and expensive.

Naturally, all of Carrie’s friends are concerned about her health and she’s overwhelmed with messages and emails from friends right now. She asked me if I would help her set up a blog so she could keep everybody informed about how things are going and how she’s feeling. Instead of answering multiple emails, she could send everyone to her blog.

I told Carrie I’d help her start a blog, of course, but I also thought about the Sampson’s story. I suggested that we add a PayPal donation button to the blog where people could give a few dollars to help cover the expense of all that surgery and lost time at work. Carrie agreed; any help would be a blessing.

We just worked on her new blog yesterday. The blog is Maisy’s Mom and may not have a lot of information yet, but we did get a link to a donation form ready. Give a dollar if you can. More importantly, please help spread the word and the link in hopes that a whole lot of other kind people can give a dollor or two as well. Your link can help create another miracle in the blogosphere.

Cross posted at BlogHer.

Job Requirements

Are you just learning web design? I often get mail from people just starting out who want advice about what to learn. One way to answer that question is to look at some of the required skills for jobs in the web field right now.

Here’s a list of skills needed for a job of Interface Designer:

  • Very strong understanding of XHTML/CSS and Javascript (AJAX).
  • Experience in XML and XHTML generation using XSLT.
  • A passion for usability and web standards
  • Experience in basic ASP and/or ASP.NET programming
  • Good oral & written communication skills, and documentation discipline
  • Basic Photoshop skills

Here’s another looking for a UI designer. They want someone who has

  • a healthy dose of development skill
  • design a killer mockup and actually produce a slick interface using XHTML/CSS.
  • both layout and JavaScript frameworks

Another web designer/developer job posting is looking for someone with these skills:

  • DHTML, XHTML, CSS, JavaScript, AJAX
  • Expert in W3C compliant, cross browser compatible, CSS/HTML development
  • Photoshop/Fireworks (or even GIMP)
  • Strong knowledge of design basics and principles

It’s always a good idea to run a reality check to make sure you are teaching and/or learning the skills that are actually in demand. That’s why I keep a jobs widget on this site. I hope people teaching college level web classes, in particular, take note of what employers are looking for.

Please leave a comment at YouTube

Please watch this video at YouTube and leave a comment about it there. Do it ASAP during the UN Climate Conference in Poland. If you join the others doing this, you can drive this video to the top on YouTube and bring it to the attention of the scientists talking about climate change in Poland.

Remember, leave a comment at YouTube, not here.

Thanks for your help.

Useful Links: History of HTML, end of life for print?, social media and recorded history, slowblogging, and Useful Links in general

HTML History on the ESW Wiki at the w3.org site may be useful to teachers. I can’t find any explanation of what ESW means, but the wiki purpose is

for connecting the people who make the specs with the people who build on them. Pages here have no formal status but may have WikiConsensus. Questions & answers here may be misleading, or just plain wrong. Or, they may be useful.

There’s an RSS feed.

PC Magazine Goes Web Only. It started  in 1982. The last print issue will be Jan. 09. This is on the heels of similar announcements from US News and World Report and Christian Science Monitor. The times, they are a changin’.

5 Ways Social Media Will Change Recorded History by Ben Parr at Mashable talks about how the plethora of available information created by social media will change recorded history. One of his conclusions:

It’s often said that history is recorded by the victors. Now history is recorded by computers and anybody can pick up that data and come to their own conclusion. The study of history will dramatically change as more and more people use and rely upon social media for daily interaction. No diary, history book, or recording can compare to the data available through social media. My belief is that social media may prove to be as pivotal as the printing press in the study of history.

Haste, Scorned. Blogging at a Snail’s Pace about a movement toward slowblogging. Slowbloggers post less and think more deeply. One comment really struck me as significant:

Technology is partly to blame. Two years ago, if a writer wanted to share a link or a video with friends or tell them about an upcoming event, he or she would post the information on a blog. Now it’s much faster to type 140 characters in a Twitter update (also known as a tweet), share pictures on Flickr, or use the news feed on Facebook. By comparison, a traditional blogging program like WordPress can feel downright glacial.

In evaluating my own blogging habits in light of the paragraph just quoted, I thought about my Useful Links posts. These really are a kind of mental bookmarking process for me, a way to keep what I want to remember here in one place. But I’m using Tumblr to store links I know I’ll want to return to for one reason or another. I’m using StumbleUpon to share links to pages that I think are excellent and worthy of notice by others. I’m using Twitter to share links and stay in contact with people. Should these useful links posts be retired from service? Are they at the end of life just like the print magazines mentioned earlier?

Are these posts of useful links only useful to me, or do you find them helpful as well?

Digital Youth Practices

apophenia published Living and Learning with New Media: Findings from a 3-year Ethnographic Study of Digital Youth with links to a summary of the findings, a white paper, and a book—all reporting on the findings. The key findings:

  1. Most youth use online networks to extend the friendships that they navigate in the familiar contexts of school, religious organizations, sports, and other local activities.
  2. Youth engage in peer-based, self-directed learning online.

apophenia commented about her part in the study and the study itself,

For those who are only familiar with my research, I strongly encourage you to check out the report to get a better sense of the context in which I’ve been working. I focus primarily on “friendship-driven practices” but the “interest-driven practices” that motivate creative production, gaming, and all sorts of user generated content are tremendously important. I focus primarily on what happens when teens “hang out” but there’s also amazing learning moments when they mess around and geek out with one another.

You can find more information at The MacArthur Foundation, which funded the project.

Journalism students get their computer!

Remember me asking you to help support a group of journalism students who needed a computer for their student newspaper? (DonorsChoose Challenge: Journalism students need a computer) They almost didn’t get it. The deadline was approaching and they were still a few hundred dollars short. Then the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation stepped in and completed the funding. YEA for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and especially YEA for the kids involved in the DonorsChoose.org project who will soon have a new computer and be able to produce a school newspaper for their high school!