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Work Skills Keeping Up?

Tony Karrer

In New Work and New Work Skills , I discuss the fact that most of us have not participated in formal learning since college on foundational knowledge work skills - especially metacognitive skills. Our work skills cannot sit still. We are struggling to keep up.

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Develop Work Skills

Tony Karrer

It's always interesting to hear the perspective of someone with a background in Knowledge Management discussing these things. Certainly helping to make it a natural part of work-flow to capture information in a way that helps the individual and the organization is the key. He asks if our work skills are keeping up.

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New Work and New Work Skills

Clark Quinn

really was all about new work skills - skills we should be learning. Actually, it's also about the fact that there's not really new work as much as there is new work skills. Work Skills Changing Most of us who used to use these things know somewhat know that they really aren't in use anymore.

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7 Types of Learning Styles to Know: How to Accommodate a Diverse Group of Learners

SkyPrep

They are stimulated by discussions and are likely to seek out feedback from instructors. However, they may not be comfortable or perform their best when working alone or on self-paced projects. Learning strengths: Great listening skills and are good at resolving conflicts Strong brainstorming and team-working skills.

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Work-from-home skills for leaders of team development

CLO Magazine

Finding and sharing relevant articles with your team members via email is a great way to offer insights, introduce new information and spark discussion during remote team meetings. Share an article with your team each day (or each week) that is related to the work you do, projects you’re working on or a special area of team interest.

Teams 99
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PKM is our part of the social learning contract

Jane Hart

PKM is also a key skill of being an effective autonomous learner – as we can see from the many individuals who are already organizing and managing their own personal learning strategies in the organization – and consequently a key aspect of BYOL (Bring Your Own Learning).

PKM 196
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Enough Tools for Now

Tony Karrer

In Work Skills Keeping Up? , I discuss the Tilde Effect. Still I’ll stick with: The bottom line for the Tilde Effect is that we live in a time of incredible innovation that directly affect the methods we use to work and learn. Our work skills cannot sit still. eLearning Technology.

Tools 102