Category Archives: Announcements

A clarification on sharing

Just to clarify, because I think there may have been some confusion:

All essays (and your online portfolio, if you’ve chosen to keep it private) should be shared with me at acavende [at] saintmarys.edu and with the two reader accounts: wreader1 [at] amycavender [dot] org and wreader2 [at] amycavender [dot] org. (Yes, the reader accounts are on a different domain than my own email account; they’re on the same domain as the course website.)

Getting started with WordPress

As promised, I’ve provided below the steps we worked through this morning. Hopefully everyone was able to get through at least part of it during class.

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Getting started with WordPress

Preliminaries

  1. Decide whether you’ll use your own name or a pseudonym.
  2. Decide whether your entire site will be password protected, or only your essays.
  3. Choose an address (URL) for your site: address.wordpress.com.
  4. Choose a title for your site.

Setting up the site

  1. Set up a WordPress.com account using your saintmarys.edu email address.
    1. Go to the WordPress.com site and click on the “Get Started” button.
    2. On the next page, fill out the form using your saintmarys.edu email address, a username (the site will suggest one, but you can change it) and password of your choosing, and the address you chose. Do not forget your username or password! For now, choose the free version of WordPress. If you like working with the platform enough that you decide you want to upgrade, you can always do that at some point in the future.
    3. Click the “Create Blog” button at the bottom of the page you just filled out.
    4. Check your saintmarys.edu email for a message from WordPress. (It will probably be in the “Updates” tab.) Click on the “Activate Blog” button you’ll find in the body of the email.
  2. You’re now all set. Your site is activated, and you should be logged in. Your should now be looking at a setup page. Give your site a title. Optionally, you can add a tagline (if you don’t want one, I’d suggest deleting the generic one that’s already filled in). Click on “Next Step.”
  3. Choose a theme (visual design) for your site. There are plenty of free ones; click “Show More Themes” to see more than the nine on the initial page. (You can keep clicking that button — which will keep showing up until WordPress runs out of themes to show you — until you find one you like.) You can change themes later if at some point in the semester you find one you like better than the one you initially selected. Once you’ve chosen your theme, click on the “Customize It!” button to adjust any settings you’d like (again, you can make changes later, so feel free to experiment). When you’re done, click “Next Step.”
  4. Connect your site to your Twitter and/or Facebook account(s) if you’d like. (If you plan to keep your site private, you probably don’t want to do this. Even if you plan to have your site public, there’s probably not much point unless you choose to use your site for blogging as well as to house your portfolio.) Click “Next Step” when you’re ready to move on.
  5. Click “Finish” on the next page (we’ll create the first post in a few minutes).
  6. The next page lets you know you’ve finished the setup process. At this point, click on “My Blog” in the menu bar. You’ll see a list of blogs, including the one you just created. Click on its name.

Managing the site; creating posts and pages

  1. At this point, you should be looking at your site (and you’ll probably see a notice that says “Apologies, but no entries were found”). Hover over your site’s name in the menu bar, then choose “Dashboard” from the menu that drops down. Go to “Settings” in the left sidebar, then choose “General.”
  2. Click in the “Timezone” section, and choose a city in our timezone (I usually choose Detroit). Click on “Save Changes.”
  3. Under “Settings” in the sidebar, choose “Reading.” In the “Site Visibility” section, choose the privacy settings you’d like. Click “Save Changes.” If you chose to make your site private, be sure to invite both me (at my saintmarys.edu address) and the two reader accounts (listed in your assignment sheets) to your site.
  4. To create a page for your essays, click on “Pages” in the sidebar. (You can delete the “About” page if you’d like.) Click on “Add New.” Give your page a name. (You can create one page to house all of your essays, and create sections in that page to separate your best pieces from the rest of your work, or you can create a page for each. It’s up to you.)
  5. Editing the page is simple; just start typing in the composer. To link to your work, just type the name of your essay. Open your essay from Google Docs in another tab or window. Click on the “Share” button in your document, then select and copy the “Link to share” in the dialog box that pops up. Return to the WordPress tab and select the name of your essay. Click the link button in the composer’s menu, and paste the link you just copied in the URL field of the dialog box that comes up (be sure to delete what’s already there first). Click “Add Link,” then click “Publish” (over on the right).
  6. To see what your site now looks like, open it in a new tab. Right click your site’s title in the top left of your window, then choose “Open Link in New Tab.” You’ll still see that you have no entries, but you’ll now see you have a new page (it will show up in your site’s menu). When you click on it, you’ll see the page you just created. You can always go back to your home page by clicking on your site’s name.
  7. The main page of your site contains all your posts. If you were seriously blogging, each of your entries would appear here in reverse chronological order, as they do on the course site. This page is what visitors see first, so it’s important to have a post here telling them what the site is for. (If you really intend to blog as well as to build your portfolio here, see me during office hours about ways to have your site be both a blog and a portfolio in ways that don’t confuse visitors.) Go back to the tab where your dashboard is open, and click on “Posts” in the sidebar, then choose “Add New.”
  8. Give your post a title, add some content, and click “Publish.”
  9. Reload your page in the other tab, and you’ll see your new post.

Backing up your work

  1. Before making any major changes (a change of theme, new widgets in the sidebar — I can say more about that for anyone interested later on —, etc.), it’s a good idea to back up your data. Actually, it’s a good idea to back up your data regularly anyway, just to be safe. To do that, go to your dashboard and choose “Tools,” then “Export.”
  2. Be sure “All content” is selected, then click on “Download Export File.” That will give you a file that you can use to restore your content if you ever have major issues with your site and need to delete everything and start over. It can also be used to move your site to another site that uses WordPress, whether it’s hosted at WordPress.com or self-hosted. I’d recommend downloading a backup file once a week. Where data is concerned, paranoia is good.

Be sure to email me the link to your site.

No, you’re not seeing things . . .

. . . and the site isn’t broken.

I’m just tinkering a bit to try to get it to display better on mobile devices. All the information is still here (though some of the information that was in the sidebar may end up located at the bottom of the page).

If the calendar widget disappears (and it might have to, because it might be the culprit causing things not to display correctly on phones and tablets), just remember that the full calendar is accessible under the syllabus menu. Also remember that you can always just subscribe to the class calendar in your own Google Calendar, and then you’ll always be up to date. 🙂

A quick note about the coming week

I misspoke in class on Friday when I said we’d have workshop time on Wednesday. The calendar shows that it will be Friday, and it’s the calendar that is correct.

That said, of course, the sooner you get started on your essays, the better. And we can certainly spend some time hashing out ideas on Wednesday afternoon if enough people would find that helpful.

Office hours on Friday, September 27th

On Friday, September 27th, I will need to cancel my office hours due to a conflicting meeting. It’s possible that this same conflict may come up a few more times during the semester. If it does, I’ll be sure to alert you.

As always, you’re welcome to make an appointment with me if scheduled office hours don’t work for you.

Of possible interest: Church and the City

This fall, Justice Education is teaming up with Campus Ministry to offer a one-credit experiential course titled “Church and the City.” The course provides students with the opportunity to learn firsthand about issues related to immigration, and includes an immersion weekend (November 8 – 10).

There will be information sessions on September 5 and September 10 for those who’d like to know more. See the course information flier for more details.