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My Personal Knowledge Management Approach

Clark Quinn

First, Harold’s Personal Knowledge Management ( PKM ) model has three components: seek, sense, and share. Here I typically use DuckDuckGo as my search engine, and often end up at Wikipedia. So that’s a rough cut at my PKM process. I discuss PKM in both my Revolutionize L&D book , and my Learning Science book.

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A new literacy? There’s an app for that

Clark Quinn

Jay Cross cites how the exceptional Google engineer is estimated to be 200 times more valuable than the average engineer. Watts Humphrey makes a compelling case for the benefits of self-improvement process in software engineering, and it’s clear the process generalizes to other tasks.

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Personal Knowledge Management

Jay Cross

Teach a man to fish… PKM: Figuring out what’s important to you, how to find it, how to keep up with it, how to make sense of it, how to recall it when you need it anew, and how to share it with others — this is ground zero for mining the riches of the web. Harold Jarche has written some great posts about PKM.

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eLearning - Social Media - Mobile Learning

Tony Karrer

, May 19, 2009 25 Tools: A Toolbox for Learning Professionals 2009 , May 19, 2009 Learning 2.0

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Learning and KM: Separated at birth?

Jay Cross

How do you implement personal knowledge management (PKM) for yourself and your organization? What might a PKM program in your organization look like, and how can it leverage social networking tools? What are the keys to promoting PKM to leadership and to getting people to actually practice it?

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eLearning Learning - Best of May

Tony Karrer

| Tony Bates , May 8, 2009 Learning 2.0

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How to be an elearning expert

Clark Quinn

Cathy Moore has Action Mapping, Harold Jarche has PKM, Con Gottfredson has the 5 moments of need, and so on. UX/UI, anthropology, software engineering, there are many fields and finding useful insight from a related one is useful to the field and keeps you fresh. The first thing is to establish credibility. Oh, one other thing.

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