Edjurist NetVibes Aggregator
Saturday, March 8, 2008 at 5:43PM
Justin Bathon in Miscellaneous

Ever wonder how I do it? How do I have time to read blogs and newspapers across the country everyday? Well, I have help. There are a lot of cool tools on the web that make the process of finding educational law news easier. Today, I will share one of my secrets so that you can use it too. Thanks to a new feature, I have made parts of my NetVibes RSS Aggregator public. Here is the link (it would be easy to bookmark, if you use those):

http://www.netvibes.com/edjurist

That's it. Netvibes.com/edjurist. Once there, you will see there are 4 different tabs available. My general tab, the Educational Law Blogs tab, the State Educational Law Blogs tab, and the Education News tab.

The cool part of this is that you can also take one or all of my tabs and start your own NetVibes page. Instead of having to input all the educational law RSS feeds into your own aggregator, you can just let me do the work for you and use mine. Then you can personalize it. For instance, in my private aggregator I have links to legal blawgs, education policy blogs, education technology blogs, education leadership blogs, political news feeds, professor blogs ... you get the point. It is a one stop shopping place for all the webpages you regularly visit. I also let widgets inside NetVibes page constantly run searches for me. My aggregator is constantly searching the Net for all the latest postings and news related to various educational law topics. Also, I am running video searches so that if someone posts something related to education law, I might catch it. I also have my aggregator checking my e-mail for me and giving me weather reports. Anyway, you see the point. Web 2.0 is about bringing to Net to you, not about you going out to get what you want from the Net. I have set up my aggregator to bring the Net to me and you can too. But, a good place to get started is with my tabs on educational law. Enjoy.  

Article originally appeared on The Edjurist - Information on School and Educational Law (http://edjurist.com/).
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