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Gov 2.0 Camp New England [licensed for non-commercial use only] / FrontPage
Unconference - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
How to run a great unconference session « Scott Berkun
Foo Camp - a set on Flickr
example of a foo schedule board.
Foo Schedule
Foo Camp 2003
the first camp
BarCamp / TheRulesOfBarCamp
Talk About Local » #TAL10
"We are pleased to announce that the Talk About Local Un-Conference 2010 will be held on Saturday 17 April at Old Broadcasting House in Leeds. Old Broadcasting House is an excellent venue in Central Leeds, in the Civic Quarter just off the Ring Road. We are delighted that this event will be in partnership with The Guardian’s Local initiative. As in Stoke-on-Trent in October, we will be using the Un-Conference format and we hope to have some of the very best hyperlocal publishers and special guests attending on the day."
Twitterers ungather to air views - Local News - News - General - The Canberra Times
The PLA Blog | Official Blog of the Public Library Association
Brief History
Brief History
Law of Two Feet
BIL 2010 — Minds Set Free
Marcia G. Yerman: An "Unconference" for Online Communities
2010 Brainstorming Forum - Unconference Wiki - SLA's Wiki Spaces



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Last changed Jun 09, 2009 22:21 by amy buckland
Labels: instructions

1. Whoever comes is the right people

2. Whatever happens is the only thing that could have

3. Whenever it starts is the right time

4. When it's over, it's over


For those of you still unsure about how the unconference sessions work - here's how things will go.

  1. You check the schedule and notice an unconference session is being held.
  2. You do a little dance of joy because you'll be able to both network and talk about interesting issues affecting your library.
  3. You arrive at the room where the unconference sessions are being held (please check the program) - ready for action.
  4. Those in the room, along with the facilitators, decide the topics to be discussed and the order of discussion.
  5. We discuss. Much knowledge-sharing happens. The facilitators take notes of the whole shebang. Notes will be posted to the wiki shortly after the session.
  6. You leave with warm fuzzies knowing that you both taught and learned during the session.
  7. You tell all your friends about the unconference session and attend more of them.
Posted at Jun 09, 2009 by amy buckland | 0 comments
Last changed Apr 06, 2009 23:03 by Karen Huffman
Labels: 2009, dc, unconference, 23things

Overview

To launch our DC/SLA Unconference held at Catholic University on April 3, Stephen Abram shared the history of the 23 things model which SLA volunteers followed to develop SLA's 23 Things along with ongoing ways we can continue to harness tools that best meet our goals in 2009 and beyond. Stephen said that short burst of ideas match adult learning styles while, at the same time, the 23 Things model offers a structure for learning. As an unanticipated consequence of applying this model, many participating libraries also saw cultural barriers across the organization reduced.

Ideas Shared for 2009

The below ideas shared during our unconference tie together our 2009 goals along with associated tools we plan to explore (and perhaps exploit) during 2009:

(view as slideshow)
     
  Living, breathing idea map: Drawn during the live conversation and sharing by participants.   Ideas reformatted using Mindomo.com. On right: Key ideas shared by all participants. On left: Tools/applications mentioned during our time together.  
 

Quick links

Additional presentations participants were interested in knowing more about...

Share Your Experience

Share your comments on what you thought about what people shared or the method used (i.e., Unconference model).

Posted at Apr 06, 2009 by Karen Huffman | 0 comments
Last changed Mar 07, 2009 03:01 by Nerida Hart
Labels: pecha_kucha

Has anyone ever been to a Pecha Kucha event - this is such fun - like speed powerpoint.?  See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pecha_Kucha

I notice we are taking 'unconference' where I suspect we mean each session is less structured than a more common 'talking head'  session.  Usually an 'unconference' referes to the whole conference - not just a session.

It seems we are putting together a series of less structured sessions and referring to them as 'unconference'.  Am I correct in this assumption?

Nerida

Posted at Mar 07, 2009 by Nerida Hart | 2 comments

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