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e-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging
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E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

Dec 14, 2015

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Aryanna Beazley
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Page 1: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

e-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0:

i-pertinent social tagging

Page 2: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

web 2.0 …its impact on e-learning

• not just software … rather, a community• open access• peer production• not just consumers• but producers too• centrality of the “prosumer”

Page 3: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

The challenges to be met by e-learning1. Think in terms of a “plural conception”2. Develop “communities”3. “Share” knowledge4. Put the emphasis on the

so-called “informal learning”

Page 4: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

1 Think in terms of a “plural conception”

• … not culture

• … but cultures

• … not knowledge

• … but knowledges

Page 5: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

2 Develop “communities”• Consider the experiences of emerging

communities

• Understand their strengths

• Redefine the relationship between learning and practice

Page 6: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

3 “Share” knowledge• Reform our way of

thinking• Share resources• Interconnect the

systems of knowledge • Reward sharing

Page 7: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

”Social tagging”• A new form of “networking”

• Going beyond taxonomies

• Assertion of folksonomies

• New ways to usethe networks

Page 8: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

Beyond social tagging “for fun” • “Tagging” knowledge

resources– objective - metadata – subjective - tags

• Enable resources to be used and shared

Page 9: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

How and what kind of “tags”• Tags consistent

with people’s– personal – learning– professional

experiences

• Pertinence

Page 10: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

Beyond social tagging “for fun”• Tag clouds

– calculation of occurrences – representation of

folksonomies

Page 11: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

“i-pertinent social tagging”• beyond the occurrence…

• evaluate the correlations between tags

• understand the relationships

• construct the social meanings of pertinence

Page 12: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

“i-pertinent social tagging”• foster bottom-up processes

• organise knowledge

• social construction of meanings

• bring the community zeitgeist to the surface

Page 13: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

4 Put the emphasis on “informal learning”

• Salvage experience

Page 14: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

4 Put the emphasis on “informal learning”

• Help tacit knowledge come to the surface • Overcome the 20/80 paradox (Cross 2005)

• Govern, monitor and “accredit” informal learning

• Recognise and manage “pervasive education”

Page 15: E-learning and new frontiers of web 2.0: i-pertinent social tagging.

Thank you for your attention

• The paper is on www.thinktag.org• Use tags: e-learning, thinktag• [email protected][email protected]