Remove Community Remove Discussion Remove Jive
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Content Curation: One More Role for an Enterprise Community Manager

ID Reflections

How does this tie in with the role of a community manager, you may ask! What role can an enterprise community manager play? In this case, the community manager's role would be akin to that of a museum curator. This can be made as general or as granular depending on the community's need. Very closely, I would say.

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From “learning technologies” to “social technologies”

Jane Hart

Threaded discussions. These might be proprietary systems like Jive , Podio , Yammer , Socialcast , or open source software, like WordPress / Buddypress or Elgg. Member profiling. Activity streams. Real-time updates. Notifications. Group spaces. File sharing areas. Content co-creation tools.

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Lurking is Not a Static State

ID Reflections

Lurking and its role in communities has been on the forefront of my mind for the past few days. It has received a lot of attention in the past from the thought leaders in the realm of learning and the role of communities in personal as well as organizational learning. This is especially true of communities in enterprises.

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Keeping Up - April's Big Question

eLearning Cyclops

However, being involved in an e-learning community is a big help. For me it is a blog community and following many experts on Twitter. Many of the blogs I follow are part of the eLearningLearning community. This is in reference the immense and rapidly expanding technology tools.

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What’s Your Learning Tool Stack?

Clark Quinn

These are to manage communication and information sharing between teams. This can be email, but increasingly we’re seeing dedicated shared tools being supported, like Slack, that support creating groups, and archive discussions and files. From there we move up to the community level. Finally, we get to the org level.

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Significance

Clark Quinn

They rightly complained about access (they can view captures of the sessions, but not participate), and I decided to host an afternoon Pacific time discussion. My ongoing question has been about transitioning from wrapping social networking around formal learning to being members of communities of practice.

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Web 2.0 Applications in Learning

Tony Karrer

It was designed to be a small to medium size group discussion, but because the room was large it was very challenging to do that successfully. I discussed a bit of these issues in First Thoughts After ASTD Sessions. Provide thoughts around the content and the discussion. However, the discussion quickly lost steam.

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