Blog Archives

Serious selfies, spring, and sensations

Thank you very much to all the contributors to Week 12’s 15 posts. Since I am behind on summaries, I hope that this brief summary will be enough to lead you to explore these posts. I found them all well worth

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Posted in #WeeklyBlogClub summary, architecture, blogging, communicating, communities, digital games, health, health services, leadership, learning, local government, management, natural environment, politics, public relations, setting goals, social care, social media, society, storm, universities, working practices

Getting personal, explaining dementia, and paper in art

We had 11 contributions for Week 5, with three themes emerging during the week: health issues, using social media in the public sector, and art. Gina Alexander returned to the  @dghealth (Dumfries and Galloway Health) blog with Take a deep breath. I was

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Posted in #WeeklyBlogClub summary, blogging, communicating, conferences, customer service, digital technology, exercise, fine art, floods, health, health services, leadership, literature, local government, management, medical practice, mental health, natural environment, painting drawing, patient care, PhD, printmaking, public sector, research, setting goals, social media, society, Third sector, tourism, travel and exploration, walking, working practices

Highlights, hopes, growing places & 2013 in review

This is the #WeeklyBlogClub Week 52 summary. That means that we’ve been going for two whole years – which is not bad since I thought that the blog would trail off and end by March 2012. We have had over

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Posted in #WeeklyBlogClub summary, blogging, childcare, communicating, communities, education, family, fine art, health, health services, leadership, learning, literature, local government, management, photography, public sector, setting goals, social media, society, storm, Third sector, training, working practices, workplace

Fighting talk, scrutiny, Spinal Tap, and the odd zombie

The themes that emerged in Week 50 included the importance of being local (heritage and networks), scrutiny, communicating in better ways, and how to do things. Mark Braggins started the week by looking at some of the images of his

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Posted in #WeeklyBlogClub summary, charitable trusts, communicating, communities, democracy, digital technology, fine art, galleries, health, health services, ideas/innovation, leadership, learning, local government, medical practice, national government, patient care, public relations, public sector, public spaces, schools, setting goals, social media, society, teaching, training, working practices

A Bedlington Terrier, how to tell tales, and ethical issues

Thank you to all who contributed to the wonderful variety of posts in Week 49 of Weekly Blog Club. It was lovely to see the return of some people whom we hadn’t seen for a while. Over in Australia, Samuel-James

Posted in #WeeklyBlogClub summary, blogging, charitable trusts, communicating, communities, construction industry, democracy, digital technology, dogs puppies, fine art, health, health services, hierarchy, history, ideas/innovation, journalism, leadership, learning, local government, management, media, painting drawing, politics, sculpture, setting goals, social media, sports, storytelling, television, Third sector, training, visual arts, working practices

#OURDAY: Some tips for telling your story during a Twitter event

In 2011, Dan Slee was part of the team at Walsall Council that was the first in the UK to tell people what a council did across 24 hours, in real time on Twitter (I remember it well). He gives

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Posted in charitable trusts, communicating, communities, democracy, digital technology, internal communications, libraries, local government, museums, parks, public relations, public sector, social media, society, streets, working practices

A talking elk, a turtle, and powerful motivation

Having been without my computer during Week 37, I got it back, mended with a new hard drive and fresh Operating System, and then I had days of getting all the other software I need back onto it during Week

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Posted in #WeeklyBlogClub summary, archives, blogging, charitable trusts, communicating, cooking, cultural heritage, elk, family, fine art, friendship, good causes, health, health services, hierarchy, humanity, humour, ideas/innovation, languages, leadership, learning, museums, music, photography, public sector, relationship, social care, social media, society, Third sector, training, turtles, unconferences, working practices

Crossroads

An extremely powerful story this week from Steve Nestor about two women, strangers to each other, but who were there when it mattered. The story looks at how the one saved the other, one was from pain and injury and

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Posted in communities, family, friendship, humanity, society

Fun, fails, rewards, and social curry

Apologies for not writing individual blogs for each post contributed to Week 33, but I lacked time during the week and was keen to get this summary out on Sunday so we don’t fall behind during Week 34. Thanks very

Posted in #WeeklyBlogClub summary, blogging, communicating, construction industry, digital technology, fire service, football, health, health services, hierarchy, ideas/innovation, learning, photography, public relations, social care, social media, society, tourism, training, working practices

Guerilla Gardening

For week 27 Karen Hart blogs about her illegal stash of plant pots on the roof of her flat. These plant pots shouldn’t be there, there’s rules about these sorts of things, regardless of whether it would improve the environment

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Posted in health, horticulture, natural environment, public spaces, society
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