Remove Analysis Remove Communities of Practice Remove Interactive Remove Social Network Analysis
article thumbnail

Summarizing Learn for Yourself

Jay Cross

Most of what we learn, we learn by interacting with others. Sharing is an act of learning and can be considered your responsibility for the greater social learning contract. It’s all a matter of learning, but it’s not the sort of learning that is the province of training departments, workshops, and classrooms.

article thumbnail

So many thoughts, so little time

Jay Cross

Productivity in a Networked Era – Assessing ROII (Return on Investment in Interaction) - Wirearchy , June 27, 2009. Friday Flashback: Chris Lott’s Information Fluency and Social Fluency , March 26, 2009. Social Network Analysis: An introduction , June 12, 2009. Communities of Practice , March 13, 2009.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Merger mania in and around eLearning

The Learning Circuits

Collaboration is important as it allows learning to become a continuous process and acts as a quality feedback loop while helping to generate new content out of the resulting interactions, all of which sits on top of the learning management system. Or as BusinessWeek recently put it - The Power of Us.

article thumbnail

Co-creation

Jay Cross

The “Community&# topic turned out to cover many potential topics: collaboration. social software apps. Communities of Practice. social network analysis. Without a “co-/com&# situation , there’s no interaction. learning with peers. discussion groups and wikis. expert locators.

article thumbnail

Communities and Networks Connection

Tony Karrer

Keywords like Online Interaction , Technology Stewardship , Catalysts are all pretty good indicators. There’s also a page that shows the Best Content from Full Circle based on social signals. Shawn Callahan of Anecdote covers collaboration and communities of practice.

Network 100