E-learning Curve Blog at Edublogs

E-learning Curve Blog is Michael Hanley's elearning blog about skills, knowledge, and organizational development using web-based training and technology in education

Is Social Learning a fad? One Organization Seems to Believe So

July 14th, 2009 · 1 Comment

Reflecting upon the growing adoption of Web 2.0 technologies in enterprises and organizations, I wrote a post called Shiny new technologies used by dusty old professions.

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Tags: e-learning

Manufacturing a New Consent: the Arrival of Social Media in Mainstream Culture

November 14th, 2008 · 1 Comment

Barack Obama has over 100,000 followers on twitter. According to Twitterholic, that’s a lot more than anyone else. On Facebook, Obama has 2.2 million “friends” compared to 745,000 for McCain. On MySpace during the US Presidential Election, Obama had 588,000 friends compared to McCain’s 188,000.
Thanks largely to unprecedented use of the internet, Obama’s campaign [...]

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Tags: e-learning

Social Software: the Runtime Effect

November 7th, 2008 · No Comments

In yesterday’s post I alluded to the idea that Barack Obama’s recent US Presidential Election win could, in no small part, be attributed to his effective utilization of social media, including the use of tools and technologies like YouTube, Facebook, blogs, and even PayPal (and other online payment solutions). Citing James Surowiecki’s 2004 text The [...]

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Tags: e-learning

Collective Knowledge and the Wisdom of Crowds

November 6th, 2008 · No Comments

It can be said that e-mail, blogs, wikis and so on are not social per se: Shirky considers that these technologies enable other communications channels including broadcasting (spam), one-to-one (SMS texting), and one-to-many (blogs), as much as collaborative interaction. More accurately, network-based internet technologies are not necessarily social, but they can support social patterns.

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Tags: e-learning