Remove Brain Remove Information Overload Remove Knowledge Management Remove PKM
article thumbnail

Coping with information

Clark Quinn

Dawson frames elements in terms of how our brain works, which makes sense. I’ve been, and remain, a fan of Harold Jarche’s Personal Knowledge Management ( PKM ). He grounds much of his arguments in the natural ways our brains work, which I also am a fan of.

Informal 180
article thumbnail

Attention Spans Are Getting Shorter

Nick Leffler

There’s a lot of information coming at us. It used to be just newspapers where we got our news, then came radio, then TV, then Internet, then our brains exploded. I mentioned above there’s so much stuff coming at us we’re likely to experience a brain explosion. Learning #chat2lrn Attention Span PKM'

Attention 100
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Learning Management Systems: The wrong place to start learning

Coursy

They won't, however, be positioning themselves well for informal learning, performance support, or knowledge management. Linear, one-way, managed knowledge flow doesn't work well in a information overload society. are examples of personal knowledge management (PKM) tools.

LMS 52
article thumbnail

Top 25 Posts and 4 Hot Topics in January - Best of eLearning Learning

eLearning Learning Posts

Here’s how I’m approaching Personal Knowledge Management - Free as in Freedom , January 25, 2010 A few months back, Harold Jarche wrote a very interesting article about sense making with Personal Knowledge Management (PKM). One way to do this is to delve into how people learn and how the brain works.