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I recalled some of the posts and articles I had read in the past about lurking as a behavior in online communities and what it indicated, and decided to dig through those again. At this point, I also "serendipitous-ly" stumbled upon a couple of conversations recently that touched upon lurking (this is why I love social media). (p.
T wo years ago, DevLearn and KM World took place simultaneously in downtown San Jose. I sensed that learning and knowledge management were converging and invited bloggers form both sides to get together at the Tidehouse to share viewpoints and guzzle beer. KM World 2009 is next week. I wonder if many KM fans will join us.
This is probably one of the most oft cited paper in the industry of sociology, education, psychology, sociometry, network analysis and other related fields and sub-fields that study human behavior.
Envisioning the Post-LMS Era: The Open Learning Network , March 4, 2010 Educase piece. Social snake oil - Learning and Working on the Web , March 1, 2010 Knowledge management (KM) was a most promising field until it was hijacked by software vendors who were selling IT systems for six figures. Good stuff.
Moderator (Clark Quinn): the question is, leave KM to the propellor heads, or getting learning folks into the model. Moderator (Clark Quinn): CoP is NOT training, but 'training' (learning) folks have a role in making it work. KM, TM, etc. Is there an emerging model for sociallearning? Asif: well said.
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