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For instance, Mark Oehlert (@moehlert) was inspired to write “ Harold Jarche is Wicked Smart and We Need to Talk about Curriculum “ I know Harold, and he is wicked smart (see this skewering of homework), so I commented on his blog and it seems we may have a semantics difference as opposed to a fundamental one.
Experienced employees can be encouraged to comment on what’s posted so that you instigate a feedback loop that helps improve the quality and relevance of the information provided. Informationseeking: Twitter and Blogs. Twitter and professional blogs can provide the latest word and perspective on key L&D topics.
As the author quotes, “Curation comes up when people realize that it isn’t just about informationseeking, it’s also about synchronizing a community.” Thanks for reading my monthly curated insights on the Axonify KNOWledge Blog! The post Curated Insights: Curation on Curation appeared first on Axonify.
As the author quotes, “Curation comes up when people realize that it isn’t just about informationseeking, it’s also about synchronizing a community.” Thanks for reading my monthly curated insights on the Axonify KNOWledge Blog! The post Curated Insights: Curation on Curation appeared first on Axonify.
After this, you have to: Filter the most relevant information. Seek reliable sources of learning materials. Chronology puts information in a timeline format. Anders Pink Blog offered some ways to effectively filter out data you can get and integrate them into eLearning. Determine the best content curation strategy.
I have been reviewing the blog discussions on Work Literacy Gap and Frameworks between Harold Jarche , Tony Karrer and Michelle Martin's. The discussions are very helpful in formulating my thoughts on the issues of social learning tools, technologies and impacts on performance.
This blog explores some of the best practices for making your LMS more engaging. When it comes to learning and development, users like the idea of new skills or information they are learning to have relevant applications in real life. Seeking user feedback is another important area to take care of here.
First, the "informalization of everything" is important. I commented on this very briefly here in my blog and the column at Poynter Online (everything you need to be a better journalist) has some thought-provoking questions. Anyone can now say anything about anything. Whether it's true or not.
The volume of information being created is increasing faster than we can make sense of it. Think: blogs, email, wikis, communities of practice. Indeed, the ease with which organizations can generate, review, and retrieve information has helped them build a considerable amount of potential learning resources.
The more you can build on old information and make new connections, the better it will stick. And it will also encourage information-seeking, to go further and look for more information. They can find me on Gamification Nation where I blog three times a week. ‘Oh, I didn’t know I could use that there.
However, aggregation can be infused with greater depth as described in IsContent Curation the New Black … manyof the world's top websites and blogs are largely curation-based. But while useful, it is lower on the valuechain. Lifehacker.com is a great example. Reference: Content Strategy andCuration : A stack on Delicious.
They have the same job but instead of paintings, deal with digital artifacts such as: blog posts and Tweets. Curating these items — selecting, organizing, evaluating, and sharing them widely — multiplies an organization’s return on information many times over. Publish on social sites, blog, mail list, and social media.
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