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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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867 Articles match "future","individual"
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The Latest from Informal Learning Flow
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Common Craft - NOT a Viral Video Company
The truth is, we make high quality educational videos - videos that help organizations and individuals accomplish goals. That's where you'll find us in the future.
...Tags: I've been really excited to see the feedback about the new Web License . Asking people to pay to embed a video has raised questions and responding to them has been an interesting experience.
Common Craft - Explanations In Plain English -
- Monday, March 15, 2010
Online Learning Environment - 1999
This means that an instructor may react to a particular class (or even a particular individual) by amending instructions or providing access to resources as needed. Future options for Comm Badge will include the ability to save messages (both those send and those received) and to email messages to a regular email address. Clist Clist stands for C onvergent Discussion List . The key to all this is the Build This is documentation for a learning management system I built at Assiniboine Community College between the years 1995-1999. It does not refer to a currently existing system,
Half an Hour
- Sunday, March 14, 2010
Craig Barrett Takes On Vivek Wadhwa In The Tech Education Debate
If we look at the US for a moment we can make several observations about the education of our current and future work force.
STEM education is key for our future. And we need more STEM graduate students to drive those industries that are key to our future. Editor’s note : The most valuable employees of any technology company are the engineers and scientists, which is why everyone in Silicon Valley does whatever they can to ensure the continuous supply to this talent pool. The size of the talent pool is ultimately determined by the number of people who graduate
TechCrunch
- Sunday, March 14, 2010
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The Best from Informal Learning Flow
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The future of universities
On one hand, easy access to high-speed networks is empowering individuals. Empowerment of the individual — or consumerization — is reducing the individual’s reliance on traditional brick-and-mortar institutions in favor of new and emerging virtual ones. The Future of Higher Education :
How are universities likely to be impacted by current technological trends? Two publications seek to address this question:
elearnspace
- Monday, November 3, 2008
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Explainers to Watch in 2009
Individuals and organizations will find business models in helping people deal with the complexity. Below are some companies and individuals who we think will be making a real contribution in 2009.
Explainer Do you know companies, websites or individuals who are good explainers? If there is one prediction I have for 2009, it will be that our world will become more complex.?? We will all be confronted with new products, services, ideas and concepts that will confuse the majority of us.??
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The Web of Identities: Making Machine-Accessible People Data
In an email, Chris Bizer hinted that a payment model to charge for particular content may come in future.
In the future, ID providers will loosen their connection to social applications and start taking over management of users' social attributes. ID providers will most likely refer to their users via URIs in the future as well. In a previous article, we discussed the Web of data , which is about inter-linking open data sets and, thus, turning them into machine-accessible structured data. In this post, we'll draw a picture of how the emerging social Web could serve as
ReadWriteWeb
- Saturday, July 11, 2009
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Futures of the Internet
Earlier this year the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project and Elon University conducted research toward The Future of the Internet IV , the latest in their survey series , which began with Future of the Internet I – 2004 . This latest report includes guided input from subjects such as myself (a “thoughtful analyst,” they kindly said) on subjects pertaining to the Net’s future. We were asked to choose between alternative outcomes — “tension pairs” — and to explain our views. Here’s the whole list:
Doc Searls Weblog
- Wednesday, March 10, 2010
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Ten Futures
Drawing on Richard MacManus's 10 Future Web Trends , this is a bit linear, but has the virtue of identifying future trends, not things that are around today. That won't stop a slew of populists from claiming to 'know' where the global mind is headed (a la evangelists or Marxists) - though of course, except at a very macro level, the destiny of an individual is independent of the destiny of the global mind. 1. The Pragmatic Web Forget about the Semantic Web.
Half an Hour
- Thursday, September 6, 2007
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25 Stretch Goals for Management
Third , that we must, therefore, reinvent management in ways that will make large organizations fundamentally more adaptable, more innovative and more inspiring places to work -- that will, in short, make them as human as the individuals who work within them.
In the future, they must facilitate innovation and change. Share the work of setting direction. In May 2008, a group of renowned scholars and business leaders gathered in Half Moon Bay, California, with a simple goal: to lay out an agenda for reinventing management in the 21st century. The two-day event, organized by the Management Lab with support from McKinsey & Company, brought together veteran management experts such as CK Prahalad , Henry Mintzberg , and Peter Senge ; distinguished social commentators including Kevin Kelly , James Surowiecki and Shoshana Zuboff ; and a number of progressive CEOs, including Terri Kelly from WL Gore , Vineet Nayar from HCL Technologies
HarvardBusiness.org
- Tuesday, February 3, 2009
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The Future of Online Learning: Ten Years On
files/future2008.doc In the summer of 1998, over two frantic weeks in July, I wrote an essay titled The Future of Online Learning. (Downes, We want a plan,” said my managers, and so I outlined the future as I thought it would – and should – unfold. In the ten years that have followed, this vision of the future has proven to be remarkably robust. An MS-Word version of this essay is available at http://www.downes.ca/files/future2008.doc Downes, 1998) At the time, I was working as a distance education and new media design specialist at Assiniboine Community College, and
Half an Hour
- Sunday, November 16, 2008
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Old Growth Media And The Future Of News
say about the future of the news ecosystem, it’s essential that we
travel conversation about the future of news, we need to start by talking
about Within a few years, the web arrived, and soon after I was reading a site called Macintouch, which featured daily updates and commentary on everything from new printer driver releases to the future of the Mac clone business. The following is a speech I gave yesterday at the South By Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin.
I If you happened to being hanging out in
front front of the old College Hill Bookstore in Providence
stevenberlinjohnson.com
- Saturday, March 14, 2009
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Web 2.0 Tools, Networks and Community (Individuals vs. Collective)
The key indicator for us is that community is present when individual and collective identity begins to be expressed; when we care about who said what, not just the what; when relationship is part of the dynamic and links are no longer the only currency of exchange (Packwood 2005). world where I share content via Blogger - I actually have found much more of a direct connection to other individuals . Nancy just created a post out of an article and presentation that I had linked to before: Full Circle Online Interaction Blog: Blogs and Community - launching a new paradigm for online community?
eLearning Technology
- Monday, December 11, 2006
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The Future of Our Cities: Open, Crowdsourced, and Participatory
The conversation about the future of our cities should involve the people living in those cities. What if, instead, they entertained the idea of implementing an open bus tracking system, one that relied to some extent on aggregated individual input from bus riders? And much of that cost, for development and operation, would be offloaded from the city itself to the individuals building and using these services.
This Guest blogger John Geraci has spent the last six years making life in cities better with the use of web technologies. His latest project, DIYcity.org,
OReilly Radar
- Monday, April 6, 2009
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