Updates from the world of Open Access, 2014 Q4.
At first glance, Knowledge Management and Open Access may appear to be quite different from each other. But in many ways, they represent the two different sides of knowledge sharing.
While most discussions of knowledge management focus on KM from an organizational perspective, personal KM practices are just as important – and something we have more control over on an individual level.
While most discussions of knowledge management focus on KM from an organizational perspective, personal KM practices are just as important – and something we have more control over on an individual level.
While most discussions of knowledge management focus on KM from an organizational perspective, personal KM practices are just as important – and something we have more control over on an individual level. In this series, we’ll take a look at personal knowledge management following the standard framework for KM: People, Processes, and Technology.
Ten years into the Open Access (OA) movement.
At the Publishers for Development 2013 meeting in London, Susan Murray and I shared some early results and observations from the Scholarly Publishing in Africa survey.
Although Knowledge Management (KM) intersects with records management, document management, IT, and digital asset management along with other disciplines, its emphasis is on connecting people with knowledge — which, in many cases, includes both digital assets and technology.
Organizations arrive at Knowledge Management (KM) for a variety of reasons that are often hard to define or pinpoint.
Hardly a day goes by without a story appearing in a major new outlet about Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs).