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Social Is Not An Option by Ben Betts

LearningGuild

As we find out how learning happens, and how technology can support learning, some interesting hybrids (mash-ups?) Four ideas dominate: informal learning, social learning, mobile learning, and games-based learning. The result: a very different way of learning. are appearing.

Mash-up 79
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Up Pompey

Learning with e's

I will be hooking up with old pals Emma Duke-Williams (world famous in Portsmouth for her portrait of me as 'multi-me') and Manish Malik (with whom I have just written a paper on Cloud Learning Environments). I will be speaking on the topic of 'Learning 2.0: Image source Posted by Steve Wheeler from Learning with e's.

Wiki 56
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[from bwatwood] Learning with 'e's: e-Learning 3.0

Learning with e's

But what will e-learning look like in a few years time? When Stephen Downes laid down his manifesto for e-Learning 2.0 Four years on technology is moving ever more rapidly, and a reappraisal of learning within digital spaces is overdue. Secondly, many commentators such as Derek Baird believe that Learning 3.0

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Informal Learning 2.0

Jay Cross

This new learning is strategy, not support. Today’s learning is a mash-up of performance support, internal communications, collaboration, social software, real-time feeds, organization development, what’s left of knowledge management, collective intelligence, search, nurturing communities, and traditional learning.

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2008 in retrospect

Jay Cross

I’m closing the chapter on 2008 and gearing up for 2009 and beyond. Keynoted Learning Technologies 2008 in London. Topic: Learning — All Change. Marc Rosenberg, Allison Rossett, Barbara Pellow, and I led Up to Speed, an event in NYC for Mimeo. I announced the Informal Learning 2.0 and Europe.