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Informal Learning Flow is a content hub started by Jay Cross that collects and organizes the best information on the web around informal learning. We hope this will help you find good stuff, learn and stay current.
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6 Articles match "Clay Shirky","dialogue"
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Wikimedia Strategy: Ground Covered and Road Ahead
Opportunities for growth and enrichment will increasingly rely on a community that is committed to the values of Wikipedia, open to new and more diverse contributors, supportive of constructive debate and dialogue of tough issues, and providing rewarding personal experiences. Community dialogue is necessary, but insufficient — The community has had great discussions on a core set of issues that is leading to excellent recommendations on the way forward. As we turn the page from 2009 to 2010, it's a good time to check the status on Wikimedia's open strategy exercise, to reflect on the process to date and think about the work ahead.
HarvardBusiness.org
- Friday, January 8, 2010
Do Knowledge Workers and Knowledge Managers Face Much More Change ?
Clues are evident in initiatives emerging in the fields of customer and employee relationship management, organizational development, human resources management and organizational change: The use of techniques such as scenario planning, dialogue, open space, 360 degree feedback, emotional intelligence, coaching and mentoring have all grown significantly over the past several years. Clay Shirky is a well-know Internet / Web expert who published a book titled “Here Comes Everybody” last year. .
Much of what the average knowledge worker of today sees as “work” is the daily communion with the computer screen on her or his desk.
Wirearchy
- Monday, June 15, 2009
Geeks Invade Government With Audacious Goals
Clay Shirky has pointed out that these new social arrangements are leading from cooperation to collaboration to collectivism. Both The Geeks and The Govies need to listen to each other's ideas, hear each other's concerns, and work towards achieving Shirky's four stages of organizing if the government is to provide all the things that its citizens are increasingly demanding of it. I'd like to see real dialogue - such cross-polination Guest blogger Mark Drapeau is the Co-Chair of the Gov 2.0 Expo Showcase in Sept 2009 and the Gov 2.0
OReilly Radar
- Wednesday, May 27, 2009
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Clay Shirky's "Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkable"
Sometimes Clay Shirky astounds us by articulating something we've never thought of, and sometimes he astounds us by telling us something many have thought, but never so clearly and so compellingly. When I said the other day that " Twitter is the most minimal newspaper ," or when I talked to the New York Times about rediscovering what is essential in what they do, I was speaking to this same topic, but like so many others, I was still framing the dialogue around "saving the newspaper." But always, he astounds.
Into Into the first category falls the claim that he made
OReilly Radar
- Saturday, March 14, 2009
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Geeks Invade Government With Audacious Goals
Clay Shirky has pointed out that these new social arrangements are leading from cooperation to collaboration to collectivism. Both The Geeks and The Govies need to listen to each other's ideas, hear each other's concerns, and work towards achieving Shirky's four stages of organizing if the government is to provide all the things that its citizens are increasingly demanding of it. I'd like to see real dialogue - such cross-polination Guest blogger Mark Drapeau is the Co-Chair of the Gov 2.0 Expo Showcase in Sept 2009 and the Gov 2.0
OReilly Radar
- Wednesday, May 27, 2009
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Wikimedia Strategy: Ground Covered and Road Ahead
Opportunities for growth and enrichment will increasingly rely on a community that is committed to the values of Wikipedia, open to new and more diverse contributors, supportive of constructive debate and dialogue of tough issues, and providing rewarding personal experiences. Community dialogue is necessary, but insufficient — The community has had great discussions on a core set of issues that is leading to excellent recommendations on the way forward. As we turn the page from 2009 to 2010, it's a good time to check the status on Wikimedia's open strategy exercise, to reflect on the process to date and think about the work ahead.
HarvardBusiness.org
- Friday, January 8, 2010
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Do Knowledge Workers and Knowledge Managers Face Much More Change ?
Clues are evident in initiatives emerging in the fields of customer and employee relationship management, organizational development, human resources management and organizational change: The use of techniques such as scenario planning, dialogue, open space, 360 degree feedback, emotional intelligence, coaching and mentoring have all grown significantly over the past several years. Clay Shirky is a well-know Internet / Web expert who published a book titled “Here Comes Everybody” last year. .
Much of what the average knowledge worker of today sees as “work” is the daily communion with the computer screen on her or his desk.
Wirearchy
- Monday, June 15, 2009
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Media and news
Clay Shirky offers his views : “Revolutions create a curious inversion of perception. If journalism is important, but newspapers aren’t, why aren’t these so-called new journalists critiquing Shirky’s article? At best, it’s being referenced by people who agree with Shirky and ignored by those who don’t. Newspapers are the current topic of interest on many blogs/news sites. Seattle PI announces it will stop publishing a paper-version , to focus on online resources (which it states will be more than only an online newspaper but will
elearnspace
- Tuesday, March 17, 2009
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Reprise 2005 - The Medium Is The Meaning We Consume and Create … Together
For much greater and more articulate detail on these issues, see Searls’ and Weinbergers’ World of Ends , or Clay Shirky’s range of writing at www.shirky.com , or The Rise of the Stupid Network by David Isenberg, or News Is A Conversation , by Terry Heaton.
Over time, there has come to be both a very wide range of choice available to listeners, and a critical limitation – channels stay “on message”, for the most part, and do not stimulate or entertain the diversity of input necessary to establish a full-of-meaning dialogue or multi-logue. This morning I was stimulated to republish this short essay I wrote in June 2005 by following a tweeted link to David Armano’s presentation on The Micro-Sociology of Networks . As
Wirearchy
- Monday, March 9, 2009
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