Touch the firehose of ds106, the most recent flow of content from all of the blogs syndicated into ds106. As of right now, there have been 92792 posts brought in here going back to December 2010. If you want to be part of the flow, first learn more about ds106. Then, if you are truly ready and up to the task of creating web art, sign up and start doing it.

  1. karenatsharon

    Remote Elementary and Secondary Teaching

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    It's been awhile so forgive me for the long post but I feel I have to write something in the age of Zoom and remote emergency teaching because I am hearing a lot of horror stories coming from parents about what has been sent home and how much screen ti...
  2. @Maeve_ds106

    Live Tweet Along!

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    This Monday I participated in the DS106 radio tweet-along. At first I was a little intimidated and not sure what to expect; however, I ended up having a lot of fun. I have never participated in a live tweet-along. It was fun to interact with other students in the class, as well as with Professor […]
  3. @lizlynnkondzel

    the disappearing lady!

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    tonights radio drama was a part urban legend part Anthropocene-ic investigation of a popular urban legend about a lady whose mother disappears from a hotel after having seen a doctor for some unknown illness. Not only was this a really interesting story, but the live-tweeting aspect of the radio show was super cool! I made […]
  4. @V20Kai

    Radio Thoughts

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    On Monday night, I listened to the ds106 radio and participated in the live “tweet-along.” Although I do not remember the details of that night’s broadcast, there were a few things that stuck out to me that made storytelling more than just a bland “this happened, then that.” The narrator analyzed and compared a film […]
  5. @IezziHannah

    DS106 Radio

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    Last night, I tuned into ds106 radio and listened to the legend of the vanishing lady. This story went full circle completing the possibilities to solve the legend and the effects of pesticides and chemicals have on people and our environment. While discussing the possibilities of how the vanishing lady vanished. We discussed the arsenic […]
  6. @abbcass100

    Radio Tweet-Along

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    The Radio Show dealt with female protagonists in radio shows as well as movies. The subject of today was the renditions of the Vanishing Lady. Here are my tweets: This podcast was interesting! I didn’t know there were so few female protagonists. The creator did go a little over the top with some sound effects,…
  7. @butterball_4567

    DS106 Radio

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    Listening to the ds106 radio this week has been great. This has really shown me the unique and important art of audio storytelling. It has also shown me how dialogue can be elevated just by adding other produced works and audio clips to transport yourself into the action. This is definitely eye opening for me […]
  8. @lper0581

    Tweet along

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    I participated in the DS106 radio tweet along on Wednesday night. Professor Bond kicked off the show with a few radio bumpers (which gave me a good idea of how I wanted to do my own!) and then began the show tweeting: What I immediately found, since I had not listened to a radio show … Continue reading Tweet along
  9. @ds106_mckayla

    Ds106 radio live!

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    I participated in a live “tweet-along” with ds106 radio this week on Wednesday at 8:30-9:30pm. I heard my bumper on the radio twice! Which made me happy. I screen shotted some of the tweets below from our discussion on Twitter. Professor Bond tweeted, “We’re listening to a podcast, produced from old time radio shows, and listening for how it uses sound to convey information – senses of action, place, mood…” Overall, the sounds used within this podcast did convey the information of the place, mood, or action. The sounds helped paint the picture in my mind from the crickets, to the speech,
  10. @jupiter_pop

    THIS POST IS FOR THE BIRDS

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    Caw. Caw Caw. Birds This past Monday I tuned in to Ds106 radio’s audio drama hour and heard a flighty tale from the Anthropocene broadcast. That’s right, the story was Alfred Hitchcock’s, ‘The Birds.’ As I listened to the soothing bird sounds, (j/k, the sounds were like listening to a record screeching), I had to […]

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