Showing posts with label Learning Solutions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Learning Solutions. Show all posts

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Conference Backchannels: Archive of Collected Resource Postings

I am a huge proponent of backchannel learning.  There are many conferences I would love to be able to attend, but my budget can only accommodate one or two each year.  The backchannel is an excellent resource for learning from a conference or event that you are unable to attend in-person.
I find collecting and reviewing backchannel resources to be a valuable learning experience for me, even when I am attending a conference in person.  Sharing these collections on this blog has shown that others find value in the collections as well.
As the number of these posts grows and continue to contribute value to me and others, I have created this post as an ongoing 'archive' and single point of reference to my conference backchannel collected resource posts.  The listing starts with the most recent post and goes backwards chronologically. 
Learning 2011 (November 2011)
DevLearn 2011 (November 2011)
*This resource page is located on the DevLearn 2011 website
#140EDU 2011 (August 2011)
Training 2011 (February 2011)
ASTD TechKnowledge 2011 (February 2011)
DevLearn10 (November 2010)

Monday, March 28, 2011

What Does Making Pasta Sauce Teach Us About Backchannel Learning?

There are very few things in life that you can count on with 100% certainty.  One of the few things on that list is this: If I’m cooking dinner, chances are we’re having pasta.
And so it was with this assurance in place that you would have found me in my kitchen earlier this evening, preparing dinner.  Pasta could be an incredibly low-maintenance meal, consisting of boiling water and opening a jar of sauce.  However, I am half Italian, and as my grandmother would often say: “No self-respecting Italian would ever use jarred sauce!” 
Because this rule has been ingrained into my skull from an early age, what could be a quick 15 minute preparation lasts 60-90 minutes because I make my own sauce.  I use canned tomato sauce, which the Irish side of me allows me to describe as ‘from scratch’.
Shortly after beginning to sauté my onions and garlic, I look down and see the setup for my next steps.  This is what I see.

One of the techniques I often use to enhance my learning is to build connections between what I’m learning about and something completely unrelated.  As examples, in recent posts, I explored what Angry Birds and the 1982 video game E.T. have to do with Employee Learning. 
This past week the Learning Solutions Conference was held in Orlando Florida.  While I was not able to attend in person, I did actively follow the conference’s backchannel.  I’ve also been compiling a list of resources shared through the backchannel, reading many of the great reflective posts people have shared.  So with the backchannel very prominent in my focus, I suddenly was not looking at cans of sauce and spices.  I saw something very different.
That’s right, as I was making my sauce for the evening’s meal, I was consciously thinking “Hey, this is kind of like a conference”.  My mind continued down this path and suddenly I had connected it all the way to the end, creating an almost complete metaphoric loop with the pot I cooked the sauce in being very much like a conference backchannel.
Stay with me here – I think it’ll all make sense by the end. At least, I hope it will.
Learning as the Spice of Life
When I attend a conference, I want to absorb as much of the learning as I can.  My goal at a conference is to learn information that I can actively use and transfer into skills, essentially altering me into an enhanced version of myself.
Making sauce is not all that different, which is where that image above came from.  The spices are the information that is needed to transform the plain tomato sauce into the tasty sauce specific to the meal I am making.
Being Exposed to New Information
I’m not sure if this is ‘proper cooking’ or not, but when I add spice to my sauce, I’ll add one spice, and give the sauce a good stir before adding the next spice. If I tasted a random spoonful of the sauce immediately after adding the spices, chances are I would taste one of two things – either strongly over-spiced sauce or sauce with absolutely no spice at all.  Why? Because the spices are essentially sitting on the drops of sauce they landed on, and have not yet had a chance to spread to other drops of sauce in the pot.
Learning at a conference is no different.  When I attend a session, it’s like I’m the drops of sauce at the top of the pot that the spices landed on.  The drops underneath the top layer?  They were not in the session so they don’t get exposed to that ‘spice’. 
Stirring: The ReTweet of the Sauce
In order for all of the drops of tomato sauce to be exposed to the different spices I added to the sauce, I need to stir.  Doing so will share the ‘information’ of the salt, pepper, oregano and other spices amongst all of the drops of sauce in the pot.
In the case of a conference, the ‘pot’ would be the backchannel – built around the structure of a hashtag in which all resources for the ‘sauce’ can be found.  When it comes to a backchannel ‘pot’, the stirring is not done with a spoon; it’s done via Tweets and ReTweets.  Attendees that are exposed to a useful piece of information add a tweet about it to the backchannel.  This shares the information with other conference attendees, much the same way stirring a pot of sauce will share a single piece of oregano among many more drops of sauce then it originally landed on.

It’s Not Pasta Sauce Unless the Spices are Absorbed
When I make sauce, it’s not like I add the spices, stir it a few times, and it’s ready to be served.  I’ll add the spices, bring the pot to a boil, and then let it simmer for a bit, stirring occasionally.  I do this to allow the sauce ample time to absorb the flavor of the spices, and I continue to stir to spread the flavors being absorbed throughout the sauce.
To me, this is the most critical part of an effective backchannel.  When attendees tweet during a session, most often what they are doing is sharing information.  There may be some light real-time reflection involved, usually under the theme of “That was a good point”, which is what inspires the sharing.   The speed and activity of backchannel sharing by definition do not allow for deep reflective thoughts.
Don’t get me wrong – I’m not trying to imply that sharing through the backchannel is not useful; I believe exactly the opposite.  I think the backchannel provides an invaluable resource for engaging with the content and the other attendees in ways that are incredibly powerful.
What I am saying is that for many, they engage in the backchannel during conference sessions, but do not use it for a resource beyond that.  Most of what is shared during a session amounts to information sharing.  That’s very useful, especially when you would not be exposed to the information otherwise.  It also leaves most of the potential of a backchannel unexplored.
This is the equivalent of adding the spices to the pot, stirring them around a few times, and then immediately taking the pot off the stove.  All of the sauce may have been exposed to the different spices added to the pot, but it won’t taste nearly as good as it should.  You need to give the sauce time to absorb the flavor of the spices; it’s not about adding the spice – it’s about adding the flavor the spices provide.
That’s kind of where the backchannel for the recent Learning Solutions conference is right now.  We’ve been exposed to a great deal of information at the conference and via the conference backchannel.  If we leave the information where it is and do not give ourselves an opportunity to reflect on it, we are taking the pot off the stove too soon.  The value of learning isn’t in the receipt of new information; it’s in exploring how that information applies and can be used to improve our lives.  It’s in that exploration that we absorb the ‘flavor’ of the information.
And remember, at this point the sauce is still in the pot, so to speak.  As you reflect on the meaning and implications of the information you are exposed to, share those reflections using the conference hashtag.  Continue to review the backchannel after the conference to absorb the reflections of others, and continue stirring the pot by ReTweeting reflections of value.
One Last Thing: Where Do Non-Attendees Fit into This Equation?
One of most unique learning opportunities that a backchannel provides is making learning available to individuals who are not physically present at the event.  As I was preparing our dinner with this ‘sauce as a metaphor for the backchannel’ thought process bouncing around my head, I wondered where non-attendees fit in this analogy I was creating.  This was especially applicable to my situation, as I did not attend Learning Solutions in person, yet did soak in tremendous value from the conference backchannel.
The non-attendees that absorb learning from the backchannel are indeed part of the sauce analogy.  Non-Attendees would be the first thing added to the pot – the onions.  They are there, just waiting in the pot for the sauce to be added and the conference to begin.  They can be a critical part of the backchannel, adding additional value to the overall sauce.
Now… It’s time to eat!
As you can see, there are a great number of parallels between the process of making pasta sauce and how an effective backchannel works.  Do you see other connections?  If so, please feel free add them to the comments section below.


Monday, March 21, 2011

Learning Solutions 2011 (#LS2011) Backchannel - Collected Resources

Latest Update - 4/6 9:39AM
NOTE: Now that the conference has ended, I will be posting the date of any new additions as part of each newly added resource.

I am a huge proponent of backchannel learning.  There are many conferences I would love to be able to attend, but my budget can only accomodate one or two each year.  The backchannel is an excellent resource for learning from a conference or event that you are unable to attend in-person.

I find collecting collecting and reviewing backchannel resources to be a valuable learning experience for me, even when I am attending a conference in person.  Sharing these collections on this blog has shown that others find value in the collections as well.

This post collects the resources shared via the backchannel of Learning Solutions 2011, being held March 23-25 in Orlando, Florida.

Official Learning Solutions Conference Resources
Conference Website Home Page
Learning Solutions 2011 - Prepping for the big event by Tracy Parish
Learning Solutions 2011: Tueday's Recap by Julie Spokus
Learning Solutions Conference and Expo 2011: Finding the Spectrum of Solutions by Bill Brandon
Learning Solutions Conference Day 1 #LS2011 by Kasper Spiro
The Learning Solutions Conference and Expo 2011: Thursday Update by Bill Brandon
Wednesday's Recap #ls2011 by Julie Spokus
Learning Solutions Conference Day 2 #LS2011 by Kasper Spiro
2 Days in FL - Part 1 by Rich Benak
Learning Solutions Day 3: Saved the Best for Last #LS2011 by Kasper Spiro (Added 3/26)
Adobe Learning Summit 2011 by Rich Benak (Added 3/27)
New mLearning Authoring Tools – Wave #2 by Robert Gadd (Added 3/27)
Learning Solutions Conference: The Day After. #LS2011 by Kasper Spiro (Added 3/27)
Learning Solutions Conference and Expo 2011: Finishing with a Flourish on Friday by Bill Brandon (Added 3/28)
Learning Solutions 2011 - The Brain, Presentations, and Culture by Brent Schlenker (Added 3/29)
eLearnChat 17: ALS2011 and LS2011 show recap with Geoff Blanchard video hosted by Terrence Wing and Rick Zanotti, with special guest Geoff Blanchard (Added 3/29)
Learning Solutions 2011 Recap – Keynotes by Judy Unrein (Added 3/30)
Learning Solutions 2011: Moving Learning and Culture Beyond "Whatever" by Bill Brandon (Added 4/4)
LS2011 Recap by Darron Johnson (Added 4/4)
Learning Solutions 2011 Recap – Expo and Networking by Judy Unrein (Added 4/4)
Learning Solutions 2011 Recap – Education Sessions by Judy Unrein (Added 4/4)
Adobe Connect Mobile at Adobe Learning Summit and Learning Solutions Conference by Justin Mass (Added 4/4)
LS2011 Day 2: More on Mobile by David Glow (Added 4/4)

Session Specific
Gamification - (notes from Certificate Session - #LS2011) by Tracy Parish
Notes from Adobe Learning Summit 2011 by Jonathan Shoaf
Schedule of Topics to be Covered Wednesday at #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Tomorrow’s Morning Buzz: How Development Tools Shape Our Design by Judy Unrein
How and Why to Design Scenarios by Cathy Moore
Instructional Design for Learners with Very Short Attention Spans - #LS2011 Session Notes by Tracy Parish
March 23, 2011 Brain Rules for Learning - Dr. Medina #ls2011 by Julie Spokus
March 23, 2011 Creating Self-Paced Blended Learning #ls2011 #ls2011_103 by Julie Spokus
Creating Engaging Learning Designs - Session Notes #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Think Workscapes, not Training by Sumeet Moghe
What Consitutes a Social Learning Culture? by Sumeet Moghe
Social Learning Without the Technology Slides from presentation by Sumeet Moghe
Intro to Audio & Video Compression Slides from presentation by Nick Florio
Lessons Learned from 200 Rapid eLearning Gurus - Tom Kuhlmann #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Keynote Speaker - Nancy Duarte, author of Resonate and slide:ology #ls2011 by Julie Spokus
Martin Luther King Jr.'s speech analyzed by Nancy Duarte video from Duarte Design
Resonance Across a Chladni Plate video referenced during Nancy Duarte Keynote
Sound and Salt Patterns video referenced during Nancy Duarte Keynote
resonate: Presenting Visual Stories that Transform Learners and Audiences - #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Eight Ways you Can Build Better Quizzes with Articulate Quizmaker #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Intro to HTML 5 #LS2011 Slides from presentation by Nick Florio
LxD - Learner Experience Design Slides from presentation by Julie Dirksen
Your brain on Graphics: Research-inspired Visual Design - #LS2011 Connie Malamed by Tracy Parish
Your Brain on Graphics by Sumeet Moghe
Desigining for Mobile Learning Slides from presentation by Nick Florio
Case Study: Mobile Performance Support for Maintenance Procedures Slides from presentation by Christopher Adams
Myths of Social Media - #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Eight Ways you Can Build Better Quizzes with Articulate Quizmaker #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Nine Ways to Build Better Quizzes with Articulate Quizmaker slides and resources from Jeanette Brooks
From Knowledgeable to Knowledge-able in a Digital World - #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Intro to WordPress for Learning Slides from presentation by Nick Florio
Crash Course from the Learning Media Stage Slides from presentation by Nick Florio
Micro Learning - Knowledge in Four Minutes or Less by Sumeet Moghe
A Vision of Students Today video shared by Mike Wesch
Web 2.0 ... The Machine is Us/ing Us video shared by Mike Wesch
Micro-Learning: Knowledge in Four Minutes or Less - #LS2011 by Tracy Parish
Knowlegeable to Knowledge-able by Sumeet Moghe
LS2011 Opening Keynote: Dr. John Medina by David Glow (Added 3/28)
Morning Buzz Recap - Synchronous Learning Strategies by Anne Scott (Added 3/28)
LS2011: Creating Engaging Learning Designs by David Glow (Added 3/28)
5 Ways to Prepare & Be an E-Learning Winner by Tom Kuhlmann (Added 3/29)
Brain Rules website for the book by John Medina (Added 3/29)
Balancing sme speak with learner needs v2.0 Slides from presentation by Sahana Chattopadhyay (Added 4/4)
LS2011 Day 2 Keynote: Resonate with Nancy Duarte by David Glow (Added 4/4)
LS2011 Media Studio Session: Designing for mLearning by David Glow (Added 4/4)
LS2011 A Metrics-Performance-Learning Driven System by David Glow (Added 4/4)
LS2011: Open Education Resources by David Glow (Added 4/6)
#LS2011 Session Recap: Keepin’ It Legal by Michelle Lentz by Brian Dusablon (Added 4/6)

Miscellaneous
Conference Backchannel Archive via TwapperKeeper (Added 3/29)
Conference Backchannel Archive - Download to EXCEL via TwapperKeeper (Added 3/29)
Conference Backchannel Transcript [3/22 to 3/26] via What the Hashtag (Added 3/27)
Learning Solutions 2011 Posterous Gallery with contributions from Julie Spokus and CareFirst BlueCross BlueShield
The #LS2011 Daily via paper.li
More on SMEs – A Compilation of Blogs about Subject Matter Experts by Jon Aleckson
Use MadLibs and Spreadsheet Concatenate for Developing Assessments Screenr by David Glow
Bloom's Taxonomy for Social Networks image shared by Laura Casey
Bloom's Taxonomy - Learning in Action image shared by Laura Casey
The First Winner at Learning Solutions 2011 video posted by OpenSesame
iPad Winner #2 at Learning Solutions 2011 video posted by OpenSesame
Another Happy Winner at Learning Solutions 2011 video posted by OpenSesame
I Want by Mike Enders
Top Ten Presentation Tips shared by Jean Marrapodi via ProjectTimes
PowerPoint presentations - 8 common mistakes shared by Naomi Karten via SympleByte
Mobile Learning - 7 Interesting Patterns by Sumeet Moghe
The Seven Deadly Sins of Social Business by Sumeet Moghe
Top 100 Tools for the Twittering Teacher by Donna Scott shared by Jane Bozarth
Why Angry Birds is so successful and popular: a cognitive teardown of the user experience by Charles Mauro
Twitter Chat Schedule shard by Mark Britz
What Can Angry Birds Teach Us About Employee Learning? by David Kelly
Visual Storytelling: Interview with Nancy Duarte shared by The eLearningCoach (added 3/26)
What Does Making Pasta Sauce Teach Us About Backchannel Learning? by David Kelly (added 3/28)
New Study Shows How Mobile Learning Has Gone Mainstream by John Hollen shared by Lisa Stortz (added 3/29)
eLearning Global Giveback 3 by Amanda Warner (added 3/29)
A model of workplace learning by Jay Cross (added 3/30)
Learning Solutions Conference & Expo 2011 photo album from The eLearning Guild Facebook Fan Page (added 3/30)

Dedicated Backchannel Queries [Tool and search terms shown in brackets]
Access the up-to-date #LS2011 backchannel [Twitter: #LS2011]
John Medina Keynote [Twitter: #LS2011, Medina]
Photos shared via the backchannel [Twipho: ls2011]
Nancy Duarte Keynote [Twitter: #LS2011, Duarte]
Mike Wesch Keynote [Twitter: #LS2011, Wesch]

The conference may be over, but the backchannel continues!  I will be adding to this list as I continue to review the backchannel transcripts and find resources.  I will tweet updates occasionally as additional links are added.  If you know of a valued resource I should add to the list - or if something is inaccurate - please add it to the comments or tweet me a link to @LnDDave.

If you find these collections of value, I have posts that consolidate the backchannel resources from other conferences.  An archive of all of these posts can be accessed by clicking the link below:

Click here to access the archive of backchannel resource posts.