Remove Participatory Remove Ratio Remove Tag
article thumbnail

Shoulder-to-Shoulder Instructional Media: My Tagging Screencast at NTEN!

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Photo from my flickr stream View the Tagging Screencast Presented by NTEN. I'm pleased to announce that my screencast about tagging has been released and showcased by NTEN ! I created it for the screencast to illustrate the definition of tagging. If you have questions about tagging or want to share your organization???s

article thumbnail

Guest Post by Steve Waddell: Systems Mapping for Non-Profits - Part 1

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

These are points that, when focused upon, have a large ratio of amount-of-effort to desired-change. Key is a participatory development process. Institute for Strategic Clarity, March 15 Note from Beth: As visiting scholar at the Packard Foundation, Tags: maps movement building netaction network effectiveness network weaving.

Map 86
professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

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

article thumbnail

The Voicemail Museum: A Call-In Collection

Museum 2.0

One of the surprises that arose from that experiment was the high participant-to-spectator ratio. Tags: participatory museum usercontent. Last year, I did an experiment with Eric Siegel of the New York Hall of Science using the Voicethread technology to invite people to offer suggestions and critique on an exhibition plan.

Museum 20
article thumbnail

The Great Good Place Book Discussion Part 5: Oldenburg on the LAM

Museum 2.0

Nina's research keeps finding that the right kind of constraints work to produce a better participatory museum experience. Eric: As John Cotton Dana said, “The goodness of a museum is not in direct ratio to the cost of its building and the upkeep thereof, or to the rarity, auction-sale or money cost of its collections.

Place 30
article thumbnail

Comment Cards 2.0: Three Tools to Check Out

Museum 2.0

In many museums, comment cards are currently the most "participatory" part of the visitor experience. that the signal-to-noise ratio is low. The ideas can be tagged and grouped into categories, and can be browsed in time order, by most popular, or by category. Tags: Technology Tools Worth Checking Out marketing.

Comment 20
article thumbnail

The Exclusivity Paradox

Museum 2.0

It’s common to have low expectations with regard to the number of people who will create content in participatory platforms (online media-sharing sites, contributory projects, story-sharing exhibits). And yet ironically, we spend most of our time with participatory projects accentuating how open they are. 1% is a pretty exclusive club.