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The Icarus Sessions - 0 views

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    This framework reminds of what we need to use for our Story Booth-- Seth Godin's Icarus Sessions "The rules are simple The Icarus Sessions are a challenging new way to bring your art forward. Not to make a sales pitch, not to get customers or patrons, but to find the courage to stand up and say, "here, I made this." You can attend a session without presenting, of course. A presentation at an Icarus Session is 140 seconds long. You can go shorter, but not a second longer. You can use slides, or handouts, or even better, just bring your enthusiasm. The assignment: Tell the group about your art. What have you created? What frightened you? What matters? Not a pitch. An act of brave vulnerability. I made this. It scared me. This might not work. Here's how it changed me. What do you think?"
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What is the cloud? A primer for nonprofits. - YouTube - 0 views

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    a quick video to explain what clouds are for nonprofits; concepts are simple and appropriate for individuals to understand. By NPowerPA, a tech nonprofit that helps other nonprofits with their computer technology needs
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Knowledge, Reciprocity and Billy Ray Harris | All of us are smarter than any of us... - 0 views

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    Blog post by Chris Collison on 2.26.13, that discusses reciprocity in fostering a learning atmosphere and adoption of best practice in an organization. Excerpt: "Reciprocity is an important principle for knowledge management, and one which underpins the idea of Offers and Requests. Offers and Requests was a simple approach, introduced to make it easier for Operations Engineers at BP to ask for help, and to share good practice with their peers. The idea was for each business unit to self-assess their level of operational excellence using a maturity model, and identify their relative strengths and weaknesses. In order to overcome barriers like "tall poppy syndrome", or a reluctance to ask for help ("real men don't ask directions"), a process was put in place whereby every business unit would be asked to offer three areas which they felt proud of, and three areas which they wanted help with. The resulting marketplace for matching offers and requests was successful because: i) The principle of offering a strength at the same time as requesting help was non-threatening and reciprocal - it was implicitly fair. ii) The fact that every business unit was making their offers and requests at the same time meant that it felt like a balanced and safe process."
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A Great Guide on How to Cite Social Media Using Both MLA and APA styles ~ Educational T... - 0 views

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    simple MLA/APA matrix on citing from content in social media
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P2PU | How do I make a P2PU Course? | Quick Course: Make a P2PU Course in 1/2 hour. - 0 views

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    Very interesting simple way to build a P2PU course--has implications for Studio learning series
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How To Build Your PLN (Professional Learning Network) - YouTube - 0 views

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    This video by Seth Dickens poses two questions 1) What do I know that could be shared? and 2) What do I want to learn? While I might disagree with the order, the rest of the video (about 4 minutes long) does a beautiful job of explaining what a learning (professional or personal) network is and what it allows one to do to connect purposeful and learn. Other information: Uploaded on Feb 21, 2012 This short video is an introduction to PLNs; known also as "Professional Learning Networks" and "Personal Learning Networks." These simple, organic networks help professionals to continually learn and add new skills and knowledge through informal learning. I'd be delighted to add you to my PLN, whether you're just getting started, or have already established a network. Join me on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sethdickens Find me at my blog: www.digitalang.com/blog For Teacher-Training Seminars & educational Consultancy please contact info@digitalang.com This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. You are free: to Share - to copy, distribute and transmit the work , to Remix - to adapt the work, to make commercial use of the work provided under the following conditions Attribution - You must attribute the work to Seth Dickens -www.digitalang.com Noncommercial - You may not use this work for commercial purposes. Share Alike - If you alter, transform, or build upon this work, you may distribute the resulting work only under the same or similar license to this one.
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Seth's Blog: Hobson's choice, Occam's razor, Wheeler's which and the way we decide - 0 views

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    Seth Godin with his simple take on everything
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Edge Perspectives with John Hagel: The evolution of design to amplify flow - 0 views

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    Blog by John Hagel reviewing new book, Design in Nature, by Adrian Bejan and J. Peder Zane, looks like it was published in January 2012. As a systems person, this review resonates with me and speaks to what the WLStudio can do to help women redesign their learning systems as well as the currents that flow through their systems. They must avoid others who wish to dictate where and what and how learning opportunities are available to them. Reworded more constructively, women need to design and nuture their own learning opportunities. Excerpts from review: The book introduces us to constructal law: "For a finite-size flow system to persist in time (to live), its configuration must evolve in such a way that provides easier access to the currents that flow through it." The authors caution "that nothing operates in isolation; every flow system is part of a bigger flow system, shaped by and in service to the world around it." "As the title of the book suggests, the constructal law is ultimately a law about design. It determines which designs will survive and thrive over time. The constant interplay between flow and design drives the evolution of flow systems. The design of flow systems must evolve to enhance the flows within the system or they will die." Final excerpt from book review: The bottom line So, what does this mean for all of us? The message is simple and compelling. If we are not enhancing flow, we will be marginalized, both in our personal and professional life. If we want to remain successful and reap the enormous rewards that can be generated from flows, we must continually seek to refine the designs of the systems that we spend time in to ensure that they are ever more effective in sustaining and amplifying flows. As the authors observe, "it is not love or money that makes the world go round but flow and design"
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About The Licenses - Creative Commons - 1 views

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    Describes the 3 layers of licenses, and the 6 types of licenses available from Creative Commons. There is also a link to their simple License Chooser to help you decide which license to use.
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World usability day, contextual navigation - Neo Insight Newsletter November 2008 - 0 views

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    explains and shows simple and quick signage and complex and confusing signage
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Marketing Messages That Stick | Social Media Today - 0 views

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    Wonderful infographic on how to market your business, posted December 6, 3013, Michael Nelson on Social Media Today, with examples of these rules.Well worth taking a look at. 1. Keep it simple 2. Be unexpected 3. Be concrete 4. Get Credible 5. Be emotional 6. Tell a story
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8 Simple Ways to Create a Successful Social Media Campaign | Razoo Foundation - 0 views

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    POST (people, objectives, strategies, and tactics) method for using social media effectively, 3.27.13 by John Haydon at the Razoo Foundation. Has some merit.
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The Best Leaders Are Insatiable Learners - Bill Taylor - Harvard Business Review - 0 views

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    Blog post by Bill Taylor, September 5, 2014, HBR Blog Network Cites John Gardner "It was on what he called "Personal Renewal," the urgent need for leaders who wish to make a difference and stay effective to commit themselves to continue learning and growing" He then offered a simple maxim to guide the accomplished leaders in the room. "Be interested," he urged them. "Everyone wants to be interesting, but the vitalizing thing is to be interested…As the proverb says, 'It's what you learn after you know it all that counts.'" What did Spence learn from Collins? "You're only as young as the new things you do," he writes, "the number of 'firsts' in your days and weeks." Ask any educator and they'll agree: We learn the most when we encounter people who are the least like us.
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Creating A Connected Organization for the 21st Century: The Future of… - 0 views

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    Great slideshare presentation on creating a connected org, with simple visual comparisons of 20th century to 21st century mindset and skills.
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What You Really Need To Learn To Be Successful In Life - Part V - 0 views

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    Pretty amazing list of skills you need to be successful in life by Robin Good, June 3, 2014. This is the last five of 35 skills that he will make sure his kids know how to do. Also includes excellent resources to improve one's skills in each area. These five are: 31. How to Search 32. How To Navigate 33. How To Calculate with Numbers 34. How To Rest 35. How To Cure Oneself Excerpt (rationale) Made exception for some basic math (though learned and understood with a completely different approach) and for dwelling deeper into truly understanding how to "read" something or knowing more about one's own body and physiology, the thirty-five skills that I have explored in this guide share very little similarities, if any, with those that you can gain in the 13 years of basic traditional school education. My key selection criteria in considering, evaluating and finally choosing anyone of the skills that I have here listed, has been a rather simple question: does the mastering of this skill significantly affect my probability to live a meaningful, constructive and rewarding life experience independently of the time, part of the world, social class, and group that one could be living in? And when my answer has been positive I have included that skill. Link: http://www.masternewmedia.org/what-to-learn-to-be-successful-p5/#ixzz37SVB5qTR
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No Blog Traffic? Here's a Simple Strategy to Seduce Readers and Win Clients - Copyblogger - 0 views

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    Copyblogger post by Henneke Duistermaat, July 2014. "Follow these steps: Over the next five days, block 30 minutes for reviewing your blog. On day one, create a profile of your favorite fan. On day two, write down your blog purpose and discover why your fans come to your blog. On day three, think about your favorite fan and write down at least 30 blog topics that he'd love to read. On day four, review your blog promotion strategy. How can you reach more people in the time available to you? Which activities can you cut? How can you experiment? On day five, consider your email strategy. How can you build a closer relationship with the fans on your list?"
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Leaders and the Learning Organization | You're Not the Boss of Me - 0 views

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    Digest of ideas by Gwen Teatro, You Are Not the Boss of Me, reprinted 9/7/14, originally written in 2010. Very interesting look at the Fifty Discipline by Peter Senge. "There was a time when everyone was jumping onto The Learning Organization bandwagon. This usually happened when times were good, when organizations felt a little more ebullient...Budgets were cut....wisdom and decisions would only come from the few and learning for the many was a luxury no one could afford." Learning Organization components 1. Vision--shared--may start with one person, it must be embraced and shared by all. Can be simple, i.e., Zappo's Delivering Happiness 2. Team learning--in an age where shared leadership is or will become critical, the need to understand the dynamics and functional operation of teams is pretty great--how team members communicate with each other, how they manage conflict, and how they examine their successes...and their failures 3. Personal Mastery--taking the time to study and understand our reality and our purpose 4. Mental models--dangers of clinging to and operating from narrow perspectives--assumptions and biases in our thinking 5. Systems thinking--paying attention to the connections between and among a variety of elements that make up the whole.
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simple structures for complex problems - 0 views

  • four interdependent capabilities
  • Promote the active practice of PKM:
  • Enable distributed authority and the ability to self-govern
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  • Facilitate temporary and negotiated leadership for collaborative work
  • Allow for cooperation outside the organization and encourage experimentation
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    nice summary of what it takes to create a networked learning organization. Harold Jarche, May 6, 2015
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Rule #9: Approach answers obliquely - Liquid Agency - 0 views

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    wonderful post by Marty Neumeier on the rules of genius, rule #9 approach answers obliquely innovating--9 approaches to make new connections Think in metaphors Think in pictures Start from a different place Steal from other domains Arrange blind dates Reverse the polarity Ask simple questions Watch for accidents Write things down
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The New Habit Challenge: Create A Better To-Do List | Fast Company | Business + Innovation - 0 views

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    Simple but nice post on managing your production each day. Eat the live frog first.
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