It is time to close down my other blog, begun with the OB Anesthesia core curriculum lecture series that ran for 6 weeks and finished on October 6th. I started a blog with some additional materials, also some outlines of what we had discussed.
There were two other faculty members with administrative privileges. One sent me an encouraging comment. The other wrote a very nice reflective piece on professionalism that was triggered by an experience during her oral board examination.
I invited all the CA1s and CA2s and got nary a comment. Most residents did not accept the invitation even after repeated friendly encouragement.
Why? I wonder if it was the need to establish a google account -- I don't remember now, but is it necessary to establish an account to access a wordpress blog?
Maybe it just sounded like a waste of time. Perhaps it was -- but I thought there was some interesting stuff on it, including links to videos and some suggested reading material.
Maybe they are just more savvy than I -- and appropriately loathe to commit themselves in writing. I noticed that many of the residents who did accept the invitation to view the blog did so with an email address other than their official (name deleted) .edu address.
My intent was to moderate comments, ensuring that no brand was threatened and no patient identifiers leaked into the blogosphere, even though it is a closed blog, accessible only by invitation, and hidden from any search engines.
The core curriculum module comes back around in 18 months -- I plan to improve it -- and I plan to trot out the blog again and see what happens. Maybe I will put one on Blogger and one on WordPress and see which bait the little fishies nibble at.
Maybe supplying the residents with avatars with fake nose and glasses wasn't such a bad idea?
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
Labels
- education (1)
- expertise (1)
- fake noses (1)
- health science (1)
- residents (1)
- technology (2)
- time pits (1)
- WEb 2.0 in education (1)
- writing to learn (1)