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dr techSyllabus for graduate course on Social Software
UPDATE: For a final report on the experience of teaching this course, see here.
This Fall 2005 I will be teaching a course at Teachers College (Columbia University) on Social Software Affordances. One -
31 Dec 05
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18 Nov 05
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26 Sep 05
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'Social software' has become a convenient label to group a new generation of socio-technical systems (mostly web based) that facilitate human expression, communication, and collaboration. Examples of social software include content management systems such as blogs, knowledge and collaboration management systems such as wikis, relationship management systems such as Friendster and Orkut, distributed classification systems such as del.icio.us and furl, and the use of RSS feeds to distribute information to specific audiences. Social software represents the promise of truly networked human communities extending across the online and offline dimensions of reality. But beyond the hype, a critical approach to social software is necessary in order to explore its impact and possibilities. During this course, we will (individually and collectively) address some of the following questions:
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14 Sep 05
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12 Sep 05
Yvonne Murtaghteaching students: collaboratively produce a wiki on social software
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11 Sep 05
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Syllabus for graduate course on Social Software This Fall I will be teaching a course at Teachers College (Columbia University) on Social Software Affordances. One of the things I will be asking students to do is to collaboratively produce a wiki with all sorts of research and analysis on social software. I hope to post a link to the wiki at the end of the semester, so that others benefit from our research. Meanwhile, I am pasting below the syllabus for the class. The course is structured to enable the creation of a dynamic research community using social software tools, and I would imagine that the format can be applied to other subject matter. Any suggestions on how to make this a better course?
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31 Aug 05
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This Fall I will be teaching a course at Teachers College (Columbia University) on Social Software Affordances. One of the things I will be asking students to do is to collaboratively produce a wiki with all sorts of research and analysis on social software. I hope to post a link to the wiki at the end of the semester, so that others benefit from our research. Meanwhile, I am pasting below the syllabus for the class. The course is structured to enable the creation of a dynamic research community using social software tools, and I would imagine that the format can be applied to other subject matter. Any suggestions on how to make this a better course?
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30 Aug 05
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