Having posted that I was unable to post a top ten from 2024 looking at the dashboard I realised I could see the stats for the blog posts from 2024.
In 2024 I posted 70 posts on the blog. In 2023 I wrote 89 posts on the blog. There were 92 posts in 2022, 113 blog posts in 2021. In 2020 I had written 94 blog posts. In 2019 I had written 52 blog posts which was up from 2018 when I only wrote 17 blog posts.
The tenth most popular post was Lost in translation: the radio programme. This was a blog post from a series of posts I did during the covid pandemic, but still has relevance today.
The post at number nine was The idea of capturing a lecture… was a thought piece from April 2024. It discussed that capturing a lecture isn’t a new idea, however capturing a lecture may not be the optimum way of delivering a recorded version of the in-person session.
A really old post from 2008 was the eighth most popular post. Full Resolution Video on the PSP. Do people still use the PSP?
Seventh place was Ten ways to use QR Codes which was not a post about ten ways to use QR codes. At the time QR codes appeared to be more of a fad with people using QR codes because they were QR codes. Since then the proper use cases for QR codes has grown, most people find them useful now for doing other things, they are a means to and end.
The post at number six was from 2015, I can do that… What does “embrace technology” mean? was from the FE Area Reviews.
The post at number five was a week note from 2019, Student Journey – Weeknote #08 – 26th April 2019.
The fourth most popular post was written in February 2024 and asked the question: What makes an intelligent campus?
At number three was a post on freakish occurrences, “million-to-one chances happen nine times out of ten”. One of my favourite quotes from Terry Pratchett is that “million-to-one chances happen nine times out of ten”. When something awful happens, or freakish, we hear news reporters say “it was a million-to-one chance that this would happen”.
The second most popular post was from 2009 and asked To Retweet or not to Retweet which was a post about retweeting on the Twitter.
The most popular post in 2024 is one of the all time popular posts, The iPad Pedagogy Wheel. Published in 2013, this was number one for many years.. I re-posted the iPad Pedagogy Wheel as I was getting asked a fair bit, “how can I use this nice shiny iPad that you have given me to support teaching and learning?”. It’s a really simple nice graphic that explores the different apps available and where they fit within Bloom’s Taxonomy. What I like about it is that you can start where you like, if you have an iPad app you like you can see how it fits into the pedagogy. Or you can work out which iPads apps fit into a pedagogical problem.