Laurel alerted me to this fact about a week ago. College students from Alberta, Canada have been reading her blog, and Jay's, too.
Professor Robert Runté of the University of Lethbridge in Lethbridge, Alberta, gave the following assignment to his Social Context class this semester, worth 20% of their grade:
Wow. That's amazing. Jay and Laurel being selected to be a part of Set 7 just for being, well, normal teenagers!Blogs provide us with a unique opportunity to unobtrusively observe the private lives of a selection of (articulate) students. Links to a selection of adolescent blogs is provided in WebCT. Choose one set of ten blogs and read them regularly over the term and analyze their content. Your analysis should answer the following questions:
Please note that you are NOT to contact any of these student blog writers.
- How important is school in the lives of these students (as reported in their blogs)?
- What is their view of teachers and school? Positive? Negative?
- What is their view of your major (i.e., sports or languages)?
- What is the dominant theme of their blogs? (Dating? Annoying parents? Sibling conflict? Sports? Shopping? Travel? Drugs? Teenage Angst? Joy? Humour?)
- What are some of the minor themes that you could identify?
- How would you characterize these students' self-images? What role is the blog
serving in the development of the student's identity?- Are there any patterns that you have observed in your sample of blogs? Do you notice anything about language usage among these students? Any gender differences? You may organize your analysis as you see fit – e.g., by blog, by theme, by age, etc.
Granted, this could be considered an invasion of privacy, a concern that one of Laurel's acquaintances brought up. However, these blogs are public, so I guess they took that risk.

All I know is I only got one Albertan hit from this whole thing...one lousy hit (22 February 20:44 ET). They came through Jay's blog, and only visited my homepage. Oh, well. I guess I'm not a normal teenager. But then again, we all knew that.