Clive on Learning

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Questioning social media

Clive on Learning

The recent arrival of a new social network in the form of Google+ has given cause for reflection from some long-serving social media users and advocates. More remarkably, George Siemens, the founding father of connectivism, reports how he is losing interest in social media : Google+ was a bit of a breaking point for me.

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Social media for trainers – a review

Clive on Learning

As I have been travelling east and west across the UK this week, I’ve been taking a look at Jane Bozarth’s Social Media for Trainers on my Kindle. Social media for trainers isn’t really aimed at people like me, even though I’m seriously engaged with social media and, at least some of the time, I qualify as being a trainer.

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All that twitters

Clive on Learning

Josie's a real expert on social media and I value her opinions highly. On the other hand: Few of my colleagues are on Twitter and, of those who are, it looks like quite a few rarely update their status. Twitter would be much more valuable if all my colleagues were doing it and often. After all, all that twitters.

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Presentations in the cloud

Clive on Learning

A video with media alongside (typically slides, but could also be Flash movies, Twitter feeds, web pages, etc.). The media with accompanying audio. In the case of the second option that's a lot to look at, so the embeddable player provides the option of viewing the media component in a separate pop-up window.

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What blogging has become

Clive on Learning

A recent article in The Economist, The evolving blogosphere , clarified for me how blogs have changed over the past five years and where they now sit amongst the panoply of social media applications.

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Social learning survey results

Clive on Learning

I'm not sure I go with the term 'social learning' because this is incredibly ambiguous - after all, a fair proportion of all learning involves the learner interacting with others - but let's assume they mean the use of social media for learning and not get distracted. Chances are small organisations will find it easier.

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Profile of a learning architect: Nick Shackleton-Jones

Clive on Learning

In developing the BBC’s internal social media platform, MOO, Nick’s team talked to commissioners and programme makers. As a platform MOO has matured, and in the process, Nick gained many insights into the use of social media in the workplace. The winning entry, called Wuhow, was indeed broadcast on BBC 3.