Social software and knowledge building: supporting co-evolution of individual and collective knowledge
J. Kimmerle, U. Cress, C. Held, and J. Moskaliuk. Proceedings of the 9th International Conference of the Learning Sciences - Volume 1, page 9--16. International Society of the Learning Sciences, (2010)
Abstract
This paper presents a framework model that defines learning and knowledge building as a co-evolution of cognitive and social systems. This model brings together Scardamalia and Bereiter's theory of knowledge building and Nonaka's knowledge creation theory. We demonstrate how learning and knowledge building may occur when people interact with each other, using shared digital artifacts such as tag clouds (that result from social-tagging activities) or wikis. For both technologies, we provide illustrating data from two pilot studies. As an example, we refer to the learning processes that take place while searching for information in tag clouds. In addition, we illustrate processes of knowledge building by referring to users working on a wiki. In conclusion, the differences and similarities between these technologies are assessed, regarding their potential for knowledge building.
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Kimmerle:2010:SSK:1854360.1854362
%A Kimmerle, Joachim
%A Cress, Ulrike
%A Held, Christoph
%A Moskaliuk, Johannes
%B Proceedings of the 9th International Conference of the Learning Sciences - Volume 1
%D 2010
%I International Society of the Learning Sciences
%K knowledge_building learning
%P 9--16
%T Social software and knowledge building: supporting co-evolution of individual and collective knowledge
%U http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1854360.1854362
%X This paper presents a framework model that defines learning and knowledge building as a co-evolution of cognitive and social systems. This model brings together Scardamalia and Bereiter's theory of knowledge building and Nonaka's knowledge creation theory. We demonstrate how learning and knowledge building may occur when people interact with each other, using shared digital artifacts such as tag clouds (that result from social-tagging activities) or wikis. For both technologies, we provide illustrating data from two pilot studies. As an example, we refer to the learning processes that take place while searching for information in tag clouds. In addition, we illustrate processes of knowledge building by referring to users working on a wiki. In conclusion, the differences and similarities between these technologies are assessed, regarding their potential for knowledge building.
@inproceedings{Kimmerle:2010:SSK:1854360.1854362,
abstract = {This paper presents a framework model that defines learning and knowledge building as a co-evolution of cognitive and social systems. This model brings together Scardamalia and Bereiter's theory of knowledge building and Nonaka's knowledge creation theory. We demonstrate how learning and knowledge building may occur when people interact with each other, using shared digital artifacts such as tag clouds (that result from social-tagging activities) or wikis. For both technologies, we provide illustrating data from two pilot studies. As an example, we refer to the learning processes that take place while searching for information in tag clouds. In addition, we illustrate processes of knowledge building by referring to users working on a wiki. In conclusion, the differences and similarities between these technologies are assessed, regarding their potential for knowledge building.},
acmid = {1854362},
added-at = {2011-04-28T14:07:31.000+0200},
author = {Kimmerle, Joachim and Cress, Ulrike and Held, Christoph and Moskaliuk, Johannes},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/24635f53608b0d77417759411f5bbb6c8/tobold},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the 9th International Conference of the Learning Sciences - Volume 1},
description = {Social software and knowledge building},
interhash = {1e0bca8e962135780bdd53916f597dc6},
intrahash = {4635f53608b0d77417759411f5bbb6c8},
keywords = {knowledge_building learning},
location = {Chicago, Illinois},
numpages = {8},
pages = {9--16},
publisher = {International Society of the Learning Sciences},
series = {ICLS '10},
timestamp = {2011-04-28T14:07:31.000+0200},
title = {Social software and knowledge building: supporting co-evolution of individual and collective knowledge},
url = {http://portal.acm.org/citation.cfm?id=1854360.1854362},
year = 2010
}