Remove Personal Remove PKM Remove Teams Remove Work Team
article thumbnail

Supporting workplace learning in the network era is more than delivering courses through a LMS

Jane Hart

.” Harold goes on to explain: “The basic building block, in my experience, is personal knowledge management. People who can seek new information, make sense of it, and share it with their colleagues, will be an asset to any work team.

PKM 200
article thumbnail

The differences between learning in an e-business and learning in a social business

Jane Hart

Little interest in this area of work. Supporting Personal Knowledge Management: tools, techniques, skills and behaviours. Teams and groups encouraged and supported. Teams and groups encouraged and supported. Emerging interest in this type of work as a way of. Supporting work teams. Content curation.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

Tool Set 2009

Tony Karrer

I thought I'd kick off this year by posting a series of posts on topics related to tools and methods for work and learning. I'm hoping to address questions such as: How do you create a personal tool set or Personal Learning Environment (PLE) for yourself? It depends heavily on the person, the job, the needs, etc.

PWLE 122
article thumbnail

Personal Work and Learning Environments (PWLE) - More Discussion

Tony Karrer

I've run across a few different posts talking about Personal Work and Learning Environments which I have tentatively started to call PWLE - pronounced p-whale. This is talked about a bit in Personal and Group Learning Using Web 2.0 How do we quantify or control something that is so unique to each of us?

PWLE 100
article thumbnail

Why Content Curation Should be in Your Skillset

Jay Cross

Instead of satisfying art lovers, corporate curation saves enormous amounts of time, keeps teams on the same page, and equips everyone with the latest insights. Curation helps individuals keep professional skills sharp, improve critical thinking, earn professional recognition, build reputation, grow personal networks, and “work out loud.”