Rescooped by
Beth Kanter
from Visualization Techniques and Practice
onto Content and Curation for Nonprofits |
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Flegconsulting's curator insight,
December 2, 2014 11:28 AM
Faire le tour des outils me permettant d'effectuer une veille documentaire sur l'activité économique
socialcompany's curator insight,
August 6, 2014 6:45 AM
convincing slides to explain how scoop.it works
J-Philippe Déranlot's curator insight,
August 1, 2014 4:36 AM
Voici un billet utile pour qui veut comprendre la curation ... malgré l'inutilité de ce commentaire publié dans un de mes topics Scoop.it ;-)
Barbara Alevras, PMP's curator insight,
August 1, 2014 9:43 AM
Some great tips to help you promote the benefits of content curation as a key marketing activity. Would any of these resonate with your boss?
Ally Greer's curator insight,
July 22, 2014 6:34 PM
Great tips & tools from Scoopiteer @Brian Fanzo!
Julia Echeverría's curator insight,
July 31, 2014 6:54 AM
Este artículo es realmente interesante, qué sería de nosotros sin la curación de contenidos?, si es lo que realmente importa en la red. |
Ken Dickens's curator insight,
March 24, 2015 12:18 PM
A little long, but there are some clear directions in here. And it is not what you think! Also, think about using this info to post at times when others are not posting. Less competition! -Ken
Fred FOURNIER's curator insight,
August 9, 2015 11:38 AM
It s always a question of ...data ! Big data could make you became crazy or....help you so much !
Terry Elliott's curator insight,
August 16, 2014 7:23 AM
The image above amounts to a template for curating a digital space: Find something timeless to curate.Fit it into a pattern that makes sense.Find a larger context for why this matters.Share widely.I think this fits into Harold Jarche’s simpler seek-sense-share framework. Why does this matter? If curation is all that Tufte and Bhatt say it is, then why aren’t scaffolds like these being used more often for training and in learning systems? I am using the curation tool Scoop.it to do curation with my freshman comp students. They use Scoop.it as their introductory platform for beginning to acquire the skills Tufte enumerates above that are part of the academic and business spaces they will eventually live in. I am hoping they will demonstrate why it curation matters as they seek-sense-share their way to long and short form ‘texts’ that they will be writing all semester. That will include essays, tweets, G+ community posts, blog posts, research papers, emails, plusses, favs, instagrams, zeegas, slideshares, pictures, and a massive mobile presence from their own digital spaces. Wish me luck. Interesting links from article and from comments: http://curation.wikispaces.com/General+References“Digital Media and Learner Identity: The New Curatorship”: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/pc/doifinder/10.1057/9781137004864http://www.lkl.ac.uk/people/potterhttp://digitalcurationandlearning.wordpress.com/http://digitalcurationandlearning.wordpress.com/2014/02/01/curatorship-is-a-new-literacy-practice/http://luke-callahan.com/students-must-curate-create-a-portfolio/
Terry Elliott's curator insight,
August 16, 2014 7:26 AM
The image above amounts to a template for curating a digital space:
1. Find something timeless to curate. 2. Fit it into a pattern that makes sense. 3. Find a larger context for why this matters. 4. Share widely.
I think this fits into Harold Jarche’s simpler seek-sense-share framework.
Why does this matter? If curation is all that Tufte and Bhatt say it is, then why aren’t scaffolds like these being used more often for training and in learning systems? I am using the curation tool Scoop.it to do curation with my freshman comp students. They use Scoop.it as their introductory platform for beginning to acquire the skills Tufte enumerates above that are part of the academic and business spaces they will eventually live in. I am hoping they will demonstrate why it curation matters as they seek-sense-share their way to long and short form ‘texts’ that they will be writing all semester. That will include essays, tweets, G+ community posts, blog posts, research papers, emails, plusses, favs, instagrams, zeegas, slideshares, pictures, and a massive mobile presence from their own digital spaces. Wish me luck. Interesting links from article and from comments: http://curation.wikispaces.com/General+References“Digital Media and Learner Identity: The New Curatorship”: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/pc/doifinder/10.1057/9781137004864http://www.lkl.ac.uk/people/potterhttp://digitalcurationandlearning.wordpress.com/http://digitalcurationandlearning.wordpress.com/2014/02/01/curatorship-is-a-new-literacy-practice/http://luke-callahan.com/students-must-curate-create-a-portfolio/
Ignacio Conejo Moreno's curator insight,
February 14, 2015 7:35 AM
"A curator, therefore, whether she is a journalist-by-proxy such as Popova or a student completing an assignment in a classroom, not only collects and interprets, but also creates a new experience with it." Creo que esta definición zanja la discusión sobre si un "Content Curator" es una adaptación moderna al "Documentalista" de los medios tradicionales. De muy recomendada lectura para los que nos dedicamos a la Curación de Contenidos. |
I've been using Harold's model "Seek, Sense, Share" to explain the process of content curation to nonprofits. He first published it back in 2011 and I actually made my New Year's resolution for professional learning (http://www.bethkanter.org/seek-sense-share/)
In 2011, I had noticed that I needed to pay more attention to training my attention and to be more intentional about how I was sharing information. The Seek-Sense-Share framework really helped me. When I discovered content curation, I realized that I was doing it, but from reading Robin Good's work - I wasn't doing well.
I connected Harold's framework to content curation -- http://www.bethkanter.org/content-curation-101/ because like everything else I learn, I am turning around and using it in training - so I thought it was perfect.
Harold has updated his model and fine-tuned it for content curation.
Robin Good found it put into context - and related to the need for some sort of human intervention - to pick, select, and contextualize content - not just aggregate. I always appreciate Robin's great reminders about the need to be "brains on" when comes to curation.
Curation is not clicking, not cut and paste, not mindless sharing. You have to be disicplined about being intentional - and focus.