Remove Conversation Remove Question Remove Taxonomy Remove Technique
article thumbnail

What is the scaffolding for learning in public?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Engage: This is the process of having a conversation around the insights that are being shared. Co-Create: At this higher level, the conversations lead to co-creation. What are the techniques and methods for moving people up the ladder? Maybe it leads to other collaborative creation.

Public 103
article thumbnail

Reflections from Networked Nonprofit Workshop for 300 People

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

From Conversational Keynote To Conversational Workshop. I’ve been playing with the conversational panel or conversational keynote models for short sessions (60, 75 or 90 minutes.) A conversational approach is not an expert or a group of experts talking the whole time. Some Reflections.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Getting in on the Act: New Report on Participatory Arts Engagement

Museum 2.0

It is framed as a kind of study guide; pop-outs provide questions that tease out opportunities and tensions in the narrative. This report is not an end-all; it is the opening for a conversation. What's the relationship between the goals of participation and the techniques employed? What do you get out of the report?

article thumbnail

Free Webinar: Sharing Trainer's Social Media Bag of Tricks and Secrets

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Introduction to six different social media tools and techniques for a planning, delivering, and evaluating a training session. I also always review Bloom's Taxonomy and have found this diagram really useful. The big questions I want to know are related to the learning goals: What is the audience's level of experience?

article thumbnail

Which Social Networking Analysis Term Best Describes Virgin America?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

For example, on Twitter, a strong tie could be two nodes or people that engage consistently in two-way conversation. This is an area of tools and techniques that I have wanted to explore in further depth, but haven't. . One question: If you are looking at a social network analysis map, you are probably looking for patterns.

article thumbnail

Reflections from the World Economic Forum: Four Big Trends for Social Good Organizations to Watch

Connection Cafe

See 5 key questions you should be considering as you do here.). At #WEF17, I met Samantha Stein, founder/CEO of Hacktivision, who is leveraging Silicon Valley techniques to coordinate volunteerism in the high-tech community through hackathons benefitting the social good community.

Trend 20