Innovation and the knowledge economy
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Rescooped by Trudy Raymakers from KnowledgeManagement onto Innovation and the knowledge economy
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conversation matters: The Three Eras of Knowledge Management

conversation matters: The Three Eras of Knowledge Management | Innovation and the knowledge economy | Scoop.it

"In this video I describe the Three Eras of knowledge management that I have previously written about on this blog, Where Knowledge Management has Been and Where it is Going – Part One, Part Two, and Part Three.

 

My understanding about the third era continues to grow so I have elaborated the third era in this post. In the earlier blog post I called the third era, “collective knowledge” and I remain convinced that collective knowledge is at the heart of this change. It is the "means," but what is being managed are ideas. So I am using “Idea Management" as the label for the third era both in this video and in the accompanying chart.

 

The first two eras, Information Management and Experience Management dealt with existing knowledge, that is, knowledge that an individual or a group has gained and is available to be shared with others. The third era is about the creation or development of ideas that have not existed before."


Via Brad Abbott, jeroen thibaut
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Rescooped by Trudy Raymakers from Content Curation World
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User-Driven Curation of Academic Content: Connexions Collections and Lenses

User-Driven Curation of Academic Content: Connexions Collections and Lenses | Innovation and the knowledge economy | Scoop.it

Robin Good: Connexions is a place to view and share educational material made of small knowledge chunks called modules that can be organized as courses, books, reports, etc.

Anyone may view or contribute: authors create and collaborate, instructors rapidly build and share custom collections, learners find and explore content.

 

From the official site:

"Lenses enable both organizations and individuals to give their stamps of approval to content in the repository, allowing for user-driven quality control of modules and collections.

 

Through these lenses, users can provide their own tags and comments for items in the repository. Lenses can also be used as "bookmarks" within the repository to keep track of related or otherwise interesting content."

 

More info: http://cnx.org/

http://cnx.org/help/viewing/lenses

http://cnx.org/help/viewing/onlinecontent

 

 


Via Robin Good
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