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Trudy Lane

BBC - BBC Four Art Safari - Interview on Relationalism - 0 views

  • those phone boxes by Elmgreen and Dragset where you use the exhibit and then become aware of what poor people have to do.
    • Trudy Lane
       
      artwork example - shaming / tranformational learning theory
  • I'd say all their work was informed by a crushingly naïve political viewpoint that could only have been nurtured in the bubble of an art school. I think the misfortune of that kind of art is that it's politically imbecilic, and on an intellectual level they're still living off the arguments of the Frankfurt school - Adorno and Horkheimer
  • we live in today is one that actually offers us much more choice to resist, rebel and construct our own community and I don't think any of the artists in that programme have really taken that on board. The weakness of the art to me is that it is quite patronising actually. They're trying to tell me something that I disagree with and they're saying "Because we're artists we know better"
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  • They're involved in this ghastly game in which they have to compete to make people think that their opinion is better than the other person's opinion and I just wanted to leave that aside because I think it just clogs up enjoying the art and I think that the way ordinary people enjoy art is a lot more flexible and fun than that.
Martin M

Psychology of Social Design Talk - Bokardo - 0 views

  • Kurt Lewin’s Equation as the central tension in social psychology
  • Robert Axelrod’s 3 necessary conditions to cooperate
  • http://del.icio.us/bokardo/uxweek/
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  • Download PDF of The Psychology of Social Design
  • Abraham Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs as a precursor to the Del.icio.us Lesson
  • Peter Kollock’s 4 motivations for contributing
  • Duncan Watts’ study on social influence in interfaces
Oksana

Industry Trends: The Evolution of Knowledge Management (KM 1.0 vs. KM 2.0) by Jennifer ... - 0 views

  • Jen's presentation is one of those decks that I will be re-using over and over and over again, whenever someone would ask me where KM got started and where KM is at the moment. Call it whatever you want, Knowledge Management, KM, Knowledge Sharing, Learning and Knowledge, whatever, it is still the very same thing: sharing your knowledge and collaborating with others while you learn how to be smarter at what you do and without not necessarily working harder.
Oksana

16 Core Observations of Social Design - Bokardo - 0 views

  • Humans constantly search out ways to communicate more efficiently.
  • The primary use of the Internet is communication
  • The people we know greatly influence how we act.
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  • Humans aren’t always rational, but are usually self-interested.
  • People usually compare themselves to those in their social group, not society at large.
Oksana

CoP: Best Practices - 0 views

  • Legitimizing participation. Organizations can support communities of practice by recognizing the work of sustaining them; by giving members the time to participate in activities; and by creating an environment in which the value communities bring is acknowledged. To this end, it is important to have an institutional discourse that includes this less-recognized dimension of organizational life. Merely introducing the term "communities of practice" into an organization's vocabulary can have a positive effect by giving people an opportunity to talk about how their participation in these groups contributes to the organization as a whole.
Oksana

Improve your online sharing - Bokardo - 0 views

  • One thing you can do is to personalize the share message. Instead of saying “a friend wanted to share with you”. say “Your friend Josh wanted to share with you”.
Oksana

Knowledge Management, management des connaissances - Seven Principles for Cultivating C... - 0 views

  • Because communities of practice are voluntary... what makes them successful over time is their ability to generate enough excitement, relevance, and value to attract and engage members
  • Many natural communities never grow beyond a network of friends because they fail to attract enough participants. Many intentional communities fall apart soon after their initial launch because they don’t have enough energy to sustain themselves. Communities, unlike teams and other structures, need to invite the interaction that makes them alive. For example, a park is more appealing to use if its location provides a short cut between destinations. It invites people to sit for lunch or chat if it has benches set slightly off the main path, visible, but just out of earshot, next to something interesting like a flower bed or a patch of sunlight.
Oksana

Journal of Knowledge Management Practice, - 0 views

  • The book “Cultivating Communities of Practice” represents a major milestone in knowledge management literature.  It provides a crystallized perspective by submitting an important structural model for the communities of practice based on the experiences culled from the World Bank, Shell Oil and McKinsey and Company.
  • The purpose is to invite greater inquiring into such an approach of managing knowledge in the organisation.
  • Chapter 1 introduces the communities of practice and explains why they are appropriate social structures suitable for developing and sharing knowledge in the organisation.  The value of the communities of practice lies in its ability to connect personal development and the professional identity of practitioners to the strategy of the organisation. Hence, communities of practice yield short-term and long-term benefits to both the organisation and the individual community member. 
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  • Chapter 10 enlarges the scope of communities of practice and argues that they may transcend organisational boundaries and be formed with suppliers, distributors, consumers other organisations across national borders. In closing, it suggests that communities of practice may be formed even in the society and include areas outside business such as housing, parenting, health, education and areas of practice associated to the human society. It is insightful of the authors to conceive the far-reaching applicability of communities of practice across organisations, nations and societies. This concluding chapter asserts that the need to manage knowledge is not merely restricted within the business arena.  Furthermore, the notion of communities of practice is relevant to any context so long as there is a domain of knowledge to explore and develop, a community of members who interact and a practice in which they are engaging.
  • Chapter 9 provides the strategy to design community-based knowledge initiative for the entire organisation.
Oksana

Cultivating Communities of Practice: A Guide to Managing Knowledge - Seven Principles f... - 0 views

  • Invite different levels of participation
  • Good community architecture invites many different levels of participation. Consider the variety of activities we might find in a city neighborhood on any given day: solitary shoppers, people walking briskly to work, friends out for a casual stroll, couples chatting at an outdoor cafe, a crowd watching a street performer. Others are on the periphery, watching the action from the windows above the street. A community of practice is very similar. People participate in communities for different reasons—some because the community directly provides value, some for the personal connection, and others for the opportunity to improve their skills. We used to think that we should encourage all community members to participate equally. But because people have different levels of interest in the community, this expectation is unrealistic.
  • Alive communities, whether planned or spontaneous, have a "coordinator" who organizes events and connects community. But others in the community also take on leadership roles. We commonly see three main levels of community participation. The first is a small core group of people who actively participate in discussions, even debates, in the public community forum. They often take on community projects, identify topics for the community to address, and move the community along its learning agenda. This group is the heart of the community. As the community matures, this core group takes on much of the community's leadership, its members becoming auxiliaries to the community coordinator. But this group is usually rather small, only 10 to 15 percent of the whole community. At the next level outside this core is the active group. These members attend meetings regularly and participate occasionally in the community forums, but without the regularity or intensity of the core group. The active group is also quite small, another 15 to 20 percent of the community. A large portion of community members are peripheral and rarely participate. Instead, they keep to the sidelines, watching the interaction of the core and active members. Some remain peripheral because they feel that their observations are not appropriate for the whole or carry no authority. Others do not have the time to contribute more actively. In a traditional meeting or team we would discourage such half-hearted involvement, but these peripheral activities are an essential dimension of communities of practice. Indeed, the people on the sidelines often are not as passive as they seem. Like people sitting at a cafe watching the activity on the street, they gain their own insights from the discussions and put them to good use. They may have private conversations about the issues being discussed in the public forum. In their own way, they are learning a lot. In one community, a peripheral member attended nearly all meetings for two years, but almost never contributed. Then he was transferred to another division and, to everyone's surprise, started a similar community there. Unlike team members, community members can offer advice on a project with no risk of getting entangled in it… —Cultivating Communities of Practice Finally, outside these three main levels are people surrounding the community who are not members but who have an interest in the community, including customers, suppliers, and "intellectual neighbors." Community members move through these levels.  8  Core members often join the sideline as the topic of the community shifts. Active members may be deeply engaged for a month or two, then disengage. Peripheral members drift into the center as their interests are stirred. Because the boundaries of a community are fluid, even those outside the community can become quite involved for a time, as the focus of the community shifts to their areas of interest and expertise. The key to good community participation and a healthy degree of movement between levels is to design community activities that allow participants at all levels to feel like full members. Rather than force participation, successful communities "build benches" for those on the sidelines. They make opportunities for semiprivate interaction, whether through private discussion rooms on the community's Web site, at a community event, or in a one-on-one conversation. This keeps the peripheral members connected. At the same time, communities create opportunities for active members to take limited leadership roles, such as leading a development project that requires a minimal time commitment. To draw members into more active participation, successful communities build a fire in the center of the community that will draw people to its heat.
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