Wiki Index
Latest Activity
17 months ago
17 months ago
18 months ago
18 months ago
23 months ago
Share
• Learning 2.0 Tools: Notes from Learning & Performance Tools SIG, 6/8
This page contains synopsis of program, backchannel notes from TodaysMeet, and Resources. You are invited to comment on, correct, or extend these notes.
Learning 2.0 Tools empower & reward the entire organization for solving problems and adding to enterprise knowledge. Knowledge shared once is captured and searchable for re-use.
1)
David went over tools piloted by SIG:
·
SAP
StreamWorks – a decision making platform that has flexible modular
configurability, and interesting set of tools. But, sign up was off-putting and
free service is limited to 5 “Activities” (pages), so its role is not now emphasized. https://streamwork.com/activities/LtkQ2dmjiTeTaVTvNBuc1G
· PBworks wiki: http://amdur.pbworks.com Good tool, but functions seem supplanted by new GROU.PS Tools SIG SITE.
·
TodaysMeet: Colaborative "backchannel" notetaking at SIG: http://todaysmeet.com/lptsig
·
GROU.PS
Tools SIG SITE:
blogs, wikis, forums, RSS Feeds, documents, videos, photos; http://grou.ps/lptsig/
·
Diigo social bookmarking group. It’s an
easy way to tag, organize, & share valuable web pages, but also lets you
highlight, annotate, and add sticky notes too. http://groups.diigo.com/group/lptsig
I’ve put
up a lot of content to get these groups started, but these ‘crowdsource’ tools
need a critical mass to function, so YOUR participation will make all the
difference! Sign up to GROU.PS and Diigo is quick & easy. You can invite
others, too.
2)
David led presentation/discussion on Learning 2.0 Tools:
• Formal
learning is centralized, hierarchical, laborious, resource intensive, and slow
(1 hour e-learning = 100–200 hours of development)
•
Learning 2.0 captures knowledge of the crowd, is responsive
• Q: Lori asked for definition of Web
2.0.
A: Online
technologies that empower all users to get, create, & broadcast content.
Enable collaboration. Search & feeds make content more accessible.
• Social learning model will not replace formal
learning (FL). FL is best for new learning. (particularly certification and
compliance initiatives. Gaming and simulations are growing FL area)
Learning 2.0 suited to performance support (PS),
sharing/developing ideas & new knowledge (Jay Cross, Bob Mosher, Jane Hart)
• Example: Enterprise Wikis
– Captures business information that otherwise would just
float around in emails
– Easy to search for information
– Easy to fix mistakes thanks to versioning and audit
trail
Examples of Enterprise Use
– Knowledge bases with corporate “how-to’s”, information
for new employees, practical information
– Capturing "intelligence" such as competitor
and industry activities and consumer trends
– R&D quickly capture bookmarks and commentary on
topics. write up research proposals, notes, and experiments
– Corporate glossaries such as product terminology
From: Henrik Gustafsson & Oscar Berg: Web 2.0 At
Work © Acando AB;
• Case studies from David Wilkins:
– Over 50% of P&G’s new product ideas now come from
it’s customers outside the company.
– Ford Needed to capture & share best practices in linking new Bluetooth devices which are in a state of constant flux: User wiki 10,000 active users and over 1,000,000 message views
–Scottrade Stock Brokerage: Huge growth mode – 200+
branches in under two years Needed to capture knowledge of competitors that was
shared by clients. Need to capture & share best practices in a state of
constant flux. Results: Weekly and daily use of the system. Documentation of
common issues and specialized knowledge at marginal cost. Faster distribution
of key information. Culture of sharing & SN
• Content examples:
- customer relationship & marketing
- best practices, lessons learned, organizational strategy, workflows, innovations, trends, competitive information, sales strategies, communities of practice, brainstorming, collaboration, Idea Market, Prediction Market
- how to, FAQ wikis, customer support
- onboarding, training, on-the-job learning, reinforce & extend formal learning
Functionalities:
–
Discussions, Blogs, Micro-blogs, Wikis, Curated RSS aggregators, Social
bookmarking, Tagging, Ratings, Polls, Idea Markets, Prediction Markets,
Decision tools, File-sharing, video sharing & annotation,
–
Real-time collaboration through voice, pictures, text, co-drawing, diagramming
– Sharable
calendars, Timelines, Gantt charts, Identify & rate experts—based on
usefulness of contributions
Other
Functionalities:
–
Knowledge validation: Expert/official knowledge can be clearly identified;
other knowledge contributors have their entries rated by readers (incentivize
in employee reviews),
–
Moderation technology, Search traditional and social learning resources together
(while filtering permissions),
–Federable
user-configured platform (Like GROU.PS)
Implementation
suggestions from
Jon Ciampi, et al, Elearning! Magazine forum:Integrating Informal Learning with
Web 2.0 Technologies:
1)Identify
high-impact corporate goals that could use social networking and deliver
tangible business value: onboarding, on-the-job learning, communities based on
business role or common focus, corporate engagement, customer support forums
Also identify acute pains that learning programs can help to solve. Start small with one or two critical-use cases. Demonstrate clear value and ROI before broader roll-outs.
2)Evaluate
your one or two high-value use cases, and then look for technology to solve the
problem.
3)Define
and measure clear success criteria, like adoption rate to LMS and retention
rate.
4)Fun
factor is essential for adoption and retention
5)Establish
‘rules of the road’; Will you allow personal content and interactions? Or is it
purely work-related? What behaviors are not allowed? Will there be rewards for
certain behaviors?
Backchannel
notes from TodaysMeet:
Elaine Clark: StreamWorks -- decision making tools Ability to review decisions
Elaine Clark: Tools to try. Todaysmeet.com/lptsig pbworks grou.ps/lptsig - configurable. groups.diigo.com/groups/lptsig - bookmark site and anotat
Joe: 1 hour e-learning = 200 hours of development.
Joe: Communities of Practice....
Joe: Harnessing the intelligence of the crowd...
Joe: Which is the more reliable source? Wikipedia or CNN?
Joe: Enterprise Wikis: what makes them useful?
Joe: Case studies suggest that corporate enterprise Wikis can help...
Joe; Best way to share tips & tricks on application use?
Joe: Highest % of calls...How do I...?
Elaine Clark: What about visual recordings of screenshots for specific problems - Flash or other motion demo?
Joe: Reward people for sharing information ..instead of playing, "who stole my idea"
Joe: Having coffee at Starbucks...found a new job...
Joe: Prediction market: How long does our CEO have...?
Joe: Do leaders communicate the value of the technologies?
Joe; What are the things we learned, that have value, that we ought to share and include in our training?
Lori: I just looked it up...texting while driving is more fatal than while drinking
Elaine Clark: An expert in what?
Elaine Clark: Confluence - wiki- Atlassian
Elaine Clark: What is web 2.o The term "Web 2.0" (2004-present) is commonly associated with web applications that facilitate interactive information sh
Learning 2.0
Resources
Examples:
Jane Hart—Social
Learning Examples in the Workplace: http://www.c4lpt.co.uk/handbook/corporate.html
Brad
Anderson, CEO of Best Buy at Zeitgeist '08
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9cKXZBYapQ&feature=player_embedded#!
David Wilkins: http://dwilkinsnh.wordpress.com/2009/02/20/examples-of-real-social-learning/
Enterprise
Mashup Examples: http://www.webmashup.com/Mashup/Enterprise-Mashups/Faceforce-l3045.html
Presentations:
Henrik
Gustafsson & Oscar Berg, Acando AB:
Web 2.0 At Work - Simple
And Social Collaboration Between Coworkers: http://bit.ly/cdOZOi
David Wilkins: Doing Social Learning RightV2:http://www.slideshare.net/dwilkinsnh/social-learning-strategy-v2
Blogs:
David Wilkins: http://dwilkinsnh.wordpress.com/
Jay Cross: http://www.informl.com/
Bob Mosher and Conrad Gottfredson (archive): http://performancesupport.blogspot.com/
Jane Hart: http://janeknight.typepad.com/pick/
Dan Pontefract: http://www.danpontefract.com/
Connie Malamed: http://theelearningcoach.com/
