Skip to main content

Home/ MID822/ Group items tagged reference

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Noor AIshah

pedagogical affordances of social software functions « Taming the spaces - 0 views

  • Social bookmarking and tagging are two separate concept that share two primary traits: 1) the ability of individuals to organize knowledge in a manner that is personally meaningful and 2) to share, network and collaborate with others who share similar interests. *examining the social bookmarks by using “Network” feature in del.icio.us . Del.icio.us and Digg are two prominent examples. Sites like Furl go beyond simple bookmarking by saving a copy of the site itself. Setting aside copyright concerns, Furl ensures that valuable resources don’t disappear when a link changes or a site closes. * Organizing references: Certain sites – like connotea and CiteULike – are useful for learners to organize references when working on research papers. In addition to organizing, the references can also easily be shared with others. * Group work – have learners post their individual or group work resources on a bookmarking site, so instructors and class members can learn from the research activities of others * Encourage readers to capture resources of interest in a social bookmarking service, so future search in particular subject areas can occur within the knowledge resource they have created * Create a personal knowledge repository through sites like furl which ensure important links are kept * Tie bookmarking into blogging activities…ask learners to create a blog where important reflections – coming out of social bookmarking – can be expressed and explored (and in the process, if blogs are public, enable learners to bookmark the writing of classmates).
  •  
    Similarities between social bookmarking and tagging and how it can be used pedagogically and as a digital curation
imran md

Digital curation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • Digital curation is the selection, preservation, maintenance, collection and archiving of digital assets[1][2].
HENRI TAN

What is the Difference Between Social Bookmarking and Content Curation ? - 0 views

  •  
    A great read. We talked about the similarities of Social Bookmarking and Curation while several people in this site shared their views of the differences. Ask ourselves, are these differences valid ?
  • ...1 more comment...
  •  
    Good reference, but i dun agree with Seb that Curation is something you do primarily for others (which means being extra careful about what you include, adding context, comments, etc...).
  •  
    I do like Marc comments ... "Curation tools therefore offer functions to select and store, but also to edit, personalize and share." Social bookmarking to me is just like putting a tag in my book i.e. a shortcut to a site on the internet.
  •  
    I quite like the comments put forth by Bastian Lehmann He somehow managed to highlight the key differnces between curation versus social bookmarking =)
wittyben

Design as Learning-or "Knowledge Creation"-the SECI Model - 0 views

  • The basic argument is that knowledge creation is a synthesizing process through which an organization interacts with individuals and the environment to transcend emerging contradictions that the organization faces
    • wittyben
       
      What is knowledge creation?
    • wittyben
       
      There is a link between design & learning...
    • wittyben
       
      Design = knowledge creation process
  • ...13 more annotations...
  • Nonaka sees ongoing knowledge creation as the source of continuous innovation and continuous innovation as the source of sustained competitive advantage.
  • designing as a form of learning
  • Curiously, the converse is also true. We might characterize learning as a form of designing. That is, the process of observing, reflecting, and making (and iterating those steps) may aid learning.
  • Maurício Manhães [2], who wrote, “Design and innovation are both knowledge creation processes” [3].
  • SECI stands for socialization, externalization, combination, internalization—a model of knowledge creation proposed by Ikujiro Nonaka [5].
  • something more—to new knowledge. Thus, we might characterize desi
  • “When organizations innovate, they do not simply process information, from the outside in, in order to solve existing problems and adapt to a changing environment. They actually create new knowledge and information, from the inside out, in order to redefine both problems and solutions and, in the process, to re-create their environment.”
  • “Tacit knowledge is personal, context-specific, and therefore hard to formalize and communicate. Explicit or codified knowledge, on the other hand, refers to knowledge that is transmittable in formal, systematic language” [9]. Tacit knowledge tends to be specific to a context (available in a particular time and place), practical, routine, and procedural. Explicit knowledge can transcend a specific context (and is transferable to other times and places) and tends to be rationalizing, theoretical, and declarative.
  • Socialization
  • Externalization
  • Combination
  • Internalization
  • The analysis-synthesis bridge model describes a four-step design process. It begins with 1. directly observing a current situation, 2. reflecting on observations of the current situation to create a model representing essential elements, 3. reflecting on the model of the current situation to create a second model representing essential elements of an improved situation, and 4. instantiating the second model in a physical form or prototype.
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page