"I see eyes in my soup": How Delivery Hero implemented the safety system for ...
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Putting things in context
1. Putting things in context:
designing social media for
education
Jon Dron (jond@athabascau.ca)
Terry Anderson (terrya@athabascau.ca)
George Siemens (gsiemens@athabascau.ca)
Athabasca University
12. Social networking is a
feature, not a
destination
Chris Anderson - http://thelongtail.com/the_long_tail/2007/09/social-Â-
networki.html
13. programmes
research groups
social networks
working groups
classes meetings
multiple discontinuous
and overlapping social
and task contexts
courses
committees
study groups friends
interest areas
assignments projects
23. To do
âą group facets
âą better visual customisation
âą real-time tools
âą all views change to match
current context
24. thank you!
âą Jon Dron
âą Terry Anderson
âą George Siemens
https://landing.athabascau.ca
Hinweis der Redaktion
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social software is a good idea for learning.\nContent •Sharing of found and created objects •Emergence of patterns, computer augmented and visible •Authenticity as education activity aligns with business and social activity\nConnection •Discovery of others with whom to learn •Leveraging networks that go beyond the formal classroom or workplace community •Serendipity as networks and sets interconnect •Sustainance of sociability with a positive association of social network use and\ntraditional forms of social contact (Hua Wang and Wellman, 2010)\nControl •Empowerment to be both a reader and a writer•Adaptability to varying needs due to flexible and mashable (soft) technologies\n•Communication •Collaborating in teams and groups •Engagement and motivation brought on by persistence, visibility to and interaction\nwith others\n
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groups are the traditional stuff of learning, that you join. they tend to have hierarchies, roles, purposes, beginnings and ends\n
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nets are formed through distinct individual connections between people (sometimes via things). they have no specific boundaries on the whole (or the boundary is a set or group)\n
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sets are about categories, things that are grouped together. In a set, we are not so much interested in who is in it, but in what interests them,\n
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academia is typified by discontinuous social contexts\n
we present different facades to different people on different occasions\n
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can use many tools (but complex to manage and sustain)\ncan mash things up a bit for a PLE (but still only one perspective)\ncan use filters - only show some things to some people (but same thing, filtered)\n
like a lot of overlapping PLEs BUT also represents you differently to different people\n
give control over the various pages of the profile\nmay use nets, set, groups - e.g. blog posts for a group/groups, things tagged for sets, things friends are doing for nets\n
yes, just like google circles\ncan be used to limit widgets/profile pages to specific people at a very fine grain, e.g. your closer friends, research partners, study group, whatever - no formal boundaries\n