Clive on Learning

article thumbnail

Social learning survey results

Clive on Learning

This was a self-selecting survey to which 1069 responded, ostensibly from 'around the globe', although I would predict a strong North American skew. Respondents were asked which social media technologies they used in their organisations. Media sharing at 48%, wikis at 47%, blogs at 45%, social networks at 41%, content ratings at 13%.

article thumbnail

Is the net generation really unique?

Clive on Learning

As CA-Oxonian so nicely summarises in a comment to the article: "After all the tedious and predictable (but highly profitable) hype comes the boring reality: humans are humans. The rest are no better or worse at using technology than the rest of the population." " This certainly accords with my experience. " Tags: Gen Y.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Blogging is no longer what it was

Clive on Learning

The reality is that these people are going to represent a small minority, probably in the region of 1% of the population, as predicted by the '90-9-1 rule'. People who blog regularly are making a big commitment and are likely to have either a professional justification for this effort, or a strong desire (and ability) to communicate.

article thumbnail

Blended learning for management development

Clive on Learning

"Usage of online videos increased from 21% a year earlier to 51%, discussion forums from 24% to 40%,and social networking sites from 12% to 34%." " I could have predicted the Web 2.0 " This is not so surprising, because employees regularly cite on-job learning as the most valuable. " Yes, it does.

article thumbnail

Jakob Nielsen on social networks on the intranet

Clive on Learning

I would not have a predicted such a positive review of the progress being made by early adopters, but if Jakob is convinced then we can be comfortable that there's good evidence to back this up. technologies — unless ‘thinking about social software’ is considered progress. Tags: social networking.