Edublogs hosts hundreds of thousands of blogs for teachers, students, researchers, professors, librarians, administrators and anyone and everyone else involved in education.
Edublogs are completely free, and come with 20MB of free upload space (easily extended to 5 GB as a Supporter) and a heap of great features
We also cater for schools and universities looking to create, manage and control blogs at their own domain, with all the features of Edublogs. We call it Edublogs Campus.
So, please feel welcome to sign up for a free Edublog or get in touch with us to talk about Edublogs Campus. We’d love to hear from you!
Who’s the crew?
James Farmer is the Founder and CEO of Edublogs. He’s worked previously as an teacher, Lecturer in Education Design at Deakin University and Online Community Editor of The Age. He’s based in Melbourne, Australia and when not immersed in Edublogs-related-thought likes hanging with his girls, playing Wii (often with said girls) and roaming around Melbourne.

Andrew Billits is the Chief Technical Officer (CTO) of Edublogs. As one of the first developers to become involved with WordPress MultiUser, he probably knows more about the ins and outs of your blog than is healthy. He’s also the founder of the development site WPMUDEV, co-founder of WPMU consulting agency Incsub and is based in Birmingham, Alabama in the US of A.

Lorraine Brusch looks after the marketing, look and feel and all those ungeeky elements of Edublogs without which we’d be completely stuffed. She’s got a background as a sales exec, entrepreneur and business owner and is the vision behind our development and success. While not critiquing sustainable business models, Lol paints, draws and designs.

Sue Waters is the force behind The Edublogger (our official ‘how to’ blog) and also the seriously well respected author of the Edublog Mobile Technology in TAFE. She’s Australian, based in Perth, married with two kids and while not blogging works both with fish and other lecturers doing PD around e-learning, m-learning and everything in between.

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