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nwhysel

HASTAC Trust Challenge - 1 views

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    The Digital Humanities field is addressing this at the academic level. There is so much resistance to collaboration when sharing means someone else may publish your idea first, while at the same time, multiple operating/networked computers can leveraged to do a lot more work and discover a lot more when people work together. HASTAC is a good resource for learning about digital collaboration in the Humanities. In fact they have just launched a competition about building trust in collaborative environments focusing on education, youth and privacy issues.
cvpido

Amateur role in cooperation and viewpoint in the history of the Berkeley's Museum of Ve... - 2 views

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    starting from the Actor Network Theory (see Latour, Callon, Law) obbligatory passage points turn to distribuited passage points when the authors start describing boundary objects....
Kevin Stranack

All Is Not Vanity | Literary Review of Canada - 0 views

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    "Self-publishing is at a stage analogous to the early days of Wikipedia, when users were reluctant to trust information contained in a communally written encyclopedia. It turns out that online democracy performs quite an effective self-regulating function. "
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    Good points in the article: There are several good reasons a novelist chooses to self-publish: 1. Because of repeated rejection. 2. To get the book to market more quickly. 3. To have more control over the process. 4. To receive a larger share of the book's earnings. 5. To attract the attention of a major publisher.
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    With digitization of publishing its now an option to self publicize especially for new writers who thing their work will never be acknowledged. But musicians are also using the self publicizing/promotion and later one it does pays on. I heard of Justin Bieber story of when the mother was busy posting you-tube videos.So its possible to go a "freenuim" way and start with e.g blogging and eventually build a fan/interest base
geeta66

Access to Knowledge as a Foundation for an Open World - 1 views

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    © 2010 Carolina Rossini. The text of this article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/). EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 45, no. 4 (July/August 2010): 60-68 Carolina Rossini ( carolina.rossini@gmail.com), a Brazilian lawyer and law professor, is currently a Fellow at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University, and Coordinator of OER-Brazil ( http://www.rea.net.br).
v woolf

White Paper: Confronting the Challenges of Participatory Culture: Media Education for t... - 0 views

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    The competencies discussed by Dr. Jenkins in the Module 3 video, for those who are interested, are: "Play - the capacity to experiment with your surroundings as a form of problem-solving Performance - the ability to adopt alternative identities for the purpose of improvisation and discovery Simulation - the ability to interpret and construct dynamic models of real world processes Appropriation - the ability to meaningfully sample and remix media content Multitasking - the ability to scan one's environment and shift focus as needed to salient details. Distributed Cognition - the ability to interact meaningfully with tools that expand mental capacities Collective Intelligence - the ability to pool knowledge and compare notes with others toward a common goal Judgment - the ability to evaluate the reliability and credibility of different information sources Transmedia Navigation - the ability to follow the flow of stories and information across multiple modalities Networking - the ability to search for, synthesize, and disseminate information Negotiation - the ability to travel across diverse communities, discerning and respecting multiple perspectives, and grasping and following alternative norms."
cuptlib

Seventeen remarkable case studies of federally sponsored citizen science projects in USA - 1 views

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    New Visions in Citizen Science by Anne Bowser and Lea Shanley: * different models that support public contribution, potential challenges, and positive impacts that projects can have on scientific literacy, research, management, and public policy. * Illustrate how citizen science functions at its best demonstrating how open innovation can address agency-specific challenges in new and compelling ways.
klewis5

Participatory music culture: the challenges for identity, creativity and recognition #c... - 1 views

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    Mark Thorley (Conventry University): Participatory music culture: the challenges for identity, creativity and recognition The advent of recording technology served to break down the link between musician and audience (Eisenberg 2005), and the music participant became the music consumer. Emerging digital technologies are now reversing this trend and music participation is all the more possible.
erikitaymarijo

EL DERECHO DE AUTOR ANTE LOS DESAFÍOS DEL DESARROLLO EN EL ENTORNO DIGITAL Y ... - 0 views

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    The work gathers a thematic algid axis in your |conceptualización| and execution for the beings and agents that it is related with the right side of author. $3 make a space traveled for the beginnings of the activity we. The man from your |surgimiento| has created and it is which always it has disti...
chacunin

Changing paradigms: Education - 0 views

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    El vídeo de Mozorov del módulo 3 me ha recordado esta animación de RSA con la charla de Ken Robinson acerca de las reformas del sistema educativo. La educación no puede matar la creatividad, debe conectar los aprendizajes y sacar lo mejor de cada uno de nosotros, como veíamos en el módulo 2. Que lo disfrutéis!
christofhar

MODULE 3 - 0 views

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    This is related to Africa wild life
martin678

The Value of our Digital Identity - 7 views

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    This article by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) is made up of 5 parts: Part 1: digital identity: a driver of growth, a consumer hazard or both Part 2: a definition of digital identity and how consumers really see it Part 3: the value of digital identity - for organizations and consumers Part 4: the megatrends of digital identity Part 5: a practitioner's guide to the future of digital identity but most striking part for me was at the beginning: when the article mentioned: data explosion is possible because of four reasons: social media boom; the internet of things; online data transactions; and digital service and media and the direction towards the economic value of the digital identity
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    Here's the correct link: http://www.libertyglobal.com/PDF/public-policy/The-Value-of-Our-Digital-Identity.pdf There's a "-" between public and policy :)
cgarciauapt

Open science - 0 views

Anexo el link de un sitio para aplicar lo que se comenta en este módulo 3. http://science.okfn.org/

started by cgarciauapt on 07 Oct 14 no follow-up yet
Fabrizio Terzi

A Basic Guide to Open Educational Resources (OER) -Week 7- - 1 views

Prepared by Neil Butcher for the Commonwealth of Learning & UNESCO Edited by Asha Kanwar (COL) andStamenka Uvalic ́-Trumbic ́ (UNESCO) Link: http://goo.gl/aQCzG File: pdf 149 pages 3.9 Mb This Gu...

started by Fabrizio Terzi on 13 Oct 14 no follow-up yet
natalyefremova

Organize, edit, and share your photos - 0 views

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    Picasa 3.9 - Now with Google+ sharing and tagging
jmnavarr

Experience - 0 views

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    Os mando un enlace en donde se puede encontrar informacion basica sobre como operar en Internet. En la opcion "Aprender por internet" se detalla los cursos por internet e incluso se sugiere como crear uno. 1. Introducción 5. Correo electrónico 9. Aprender en Internet 2. Conexión a Internet 6. Comunicarse on-line 10. Seguridad en Internet 3. Los navegadores 7. Foros y Grupos de discusión 11. Blogs y CMS 4. Los buscadores 8. Comprar en Internet 12. Web 2.0 y Redes sociales
Raúl Marcó del Pont

The Knowledge Commons: Research and Innovation in an Unequal World - 0 views

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    Free access to 3 articles: The Unfolding of the Knowledge Commons pp. 13-24(12) Author: Hess, Charlotte Free Content From Lobsters to Universities: The Making of the Knowledge Commons pp. 25-42(18) Author: Caffentzis, C. George Open Access Scientific Publishing and the Developing World pp. 43-69(27) Author: Contreras, Jorge
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    Hi Raúl. Thanks for sharing these free resources. Which one do you like best? Which new insight did you gain?
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    I think Elinor Ostrom's approach to commons pool resources (used by Hess, for example) is very useful not only for understand the case of natural resources as commons (the tragedy of the commons to which it was originally applied), but to matters more close to this course, as knowledge. The approach is useful because it complicates the original perspective on commons. Originally (Elinor Ostrom) her perspective considered only group boundaries clearly defined (very small groups, peasants or indigenous); rules governing the use of collective goods well matched to local needs and conditions; cases where most individuals affected by these rules can participate in modifying the rules; the right of community members to devise their own rules is respected by external authorities; monitoring mechanisms by community & graduated sanctions. With the new commons (surprisingly, not only knowledge but roads, budgets, radio spectrum; medical commons, atmospheric commons and even silence as commons), new questions rises on the evolution or building new types of commons with no pre-existing rules and norms; increasingly complex; with size, communities, incentives often unknown; extremely dynamic; reactions to threats of enclosure; heterogeneous community; new forms of collaboration and collective action; and global in many cases. I think is a perspective that can help a lot in the case of knowledge and new forms of learning.
Jacynthe Touchette

Guerilla Open Access Manifesto (Aaron Swartz) - 3 views

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    The "manifesto" for the open access movement, written by Aaron Swartz from 2008. Only 6 years old, but already, it carries a historical value. "Will you join us?" Creative Commons license: Attribution 3.0 United States
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    Great resource and very relevant to this weeks' module! Thank you for sharing. The idea of "Guerilla Open Access" is something I had really hoped to cover more in depth in the lecture materials. Yes, there's a tension -- or a "balance", as many of the lecturers said -- between protecting creators vs. protecting consumers, but there has not been nearly enough discussion on the power dynamics and implicit within our current system. I am taking this class partly in person through UBC, and I will be sharing this resource with my seminar group this week.
itsmedianelee

Will sunshine database clarify or cloud researchers' industry ties? - 0 views

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    A federal database publicly disclosing companies' payments to doctors went live this week, drawing a splash of attention to the $3.5 billion given to physicians over 5 months last year. Although one purpose of the site is to shine light on potential conflicts of interest in research, the site may fall short of that goal.
nthabi

Macmillan South Africa - 0 views

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    Education South Africa - February 2013 With the 2012 Limpopo textbook delivery saga, and the rising cost of printed textbooks, one public school has decided to take a bold step into the future and convert to using E-books for all their learners.
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    This sounds like a good idea but then the students must have the tablets and computers to be able to read the books. Unfortunately I don't think this will work in many of the poorer rural schools that need it most.
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    The great idea of this project could be used by every educational organization, as the article say, the cost are clearly low.
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