Top Learning Blogs
My interest is corporate and organizational. These are my favorite sources.
elearningpost  Maish Nichani somehow finds three to five great links a day and sends them out via email or blog. Indispensable.
OLDaily Stephen Downes provides in-depth commentary on half a dozen topics daily. Astute. His take on ed-blogs.
Internet Time blog Jay Cross writes about learning, time, best practices, industry gossip, the absurdity of schools, and whatever else strikes his fancy. His blog page.
Learning Circuits Blog A group effort. Clark Quinn, George Siemens, Trace Urdan, Peter Isackson, Jane Knight, Sam Adkins, and others blog about learning, primarily in the corporate arena.
elearnspace George Siemens, an instructor at Red River College in Manitoba, writes "Everything of consequence that I have learned about technology and education, I've learned for free." Now he's returning the karma. Great site and blog.

 

Ed-blogs
These are more focused on schools.
Educational Blogger Network The Educational Blogger Network is a community of teachers and educational professionals who use weblogs for teaching and learning. The network assists members to advance weblog integration in education. Just lifting off in Feburary '03.
edublogs entry at Sarah Lohnes' alterego
Weblogg-ed Will Richardson, a teacher at Hunterdon Central Regional High School in Flemington, NJ, says "It's my place to collect ideas for weblogs in the classroom, to ask questions to the teacher weblogging community, and to reflect on my teaching. It's also intended to be a clearninghouse for sites and issues relating to weblogs in education."
Serious Instructional Technology geeky and good

seblogging
Weblogs, CMS, and dynamic Webpublishing for learning and education blogged by Sebastian Fiedler
Educational Tech Blog Ray Schroeder, Univeristy of Illinois at Springfield. Also see his Online Education Resource Notebook and Online Learning Blog
Sébastien Paquet Pointers and thoughts on the evolution of knowledge sharing
and scholarly communication, collected by Sébastien Paquet
A place to write, nothing fancy Chris Ashley runs new program development for The Interactive University Project, a UC/K-12 technology and curriculum collaboration at U.C. Berkeley.
SchoolBlogs Peter Ford writes, "SchoolBlogs are weblogs for education.
Often dismissed as merely 'vanity' websites, critics slate their simplicity. Yet it is precisely these two factors that are the keys to their potential. Children are vain, just like adults. They desire and require an audience for their thoughts and achievements. Every teaching college in the world extols the virtues of providing students with an audience." MORE
homoLudens Patrick Delaney.