Community-Led Activities Brian Kelly  UKOLN University of Bath Bath BA2 7AY Email [email_address] UKOLN is supported by: http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/online/emerge-2007-06/ About This Talk Questions to be addressed: What useful work can be done without significant project funding? What are the benefits of community-led activities? How can community activities help to enhance project proposals?  How can community-led activities help to embed project-funded deliverables? This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (but note caveat) Resources bookmarked using ‘ jisc-emerge-2007-06-07 ' tag
About The Speaker Brian Kelly: UK Web Focus – an advisory post which provides advices on making effective use of the on Web (with focus on standards, emerging Web technologies) Involved in Web work since January 1993 Providing support on Web 2.0 / social networks to Emerge project About UKOLN: National centre of expertise in digital information management Based at the University of Bath Funded by MLA and JISC to support the cultural heritage and higher/further education sectors Introduction
About This Talk View of history of development work (over-simplified): Project proposals developed by individuals, institutions or groups in competition with others Successful bids develop deliverables, with community engagement limited to formal tasks Vision for exploiting Communities of Practices: Benefits of  openness  being appreciated (open source, open standards, open data, …) Benefits of social networks being appreciated ( wisdom of crowds ) Social networking technologies are pervasive We (individuals, groups, institutions) can be enriched by community engagement Introduction Note current debate on approaches for institutional repositories
IR Debate Will formal projects be slow to respond to changes to the environment (technical, cultural)? Can projects do “quick and dirty” – even if that’s what users want? Are we repeating Coloured Books? http://www.slideshare.net/eduservfoundation/ http://rmfuturewatch.blogspot.com/
Aims of Session This talk (and follow-up discussion) aims to: Provide a better  understanding  of benefits of community-led activities Give  examples  of community-led activities Invite  suggestions  and  discussion  on community-led activities for Emerge community  Introduction “ If not us, then who? If not now, then when?” Within the context of U&I / Emerge’s remit for rapid development, testing, learning, iteration, etc. which may lead to new best practices for development work
Why Community? Successful deliverables require range of expertise: Visionary, innovative thinking User-focussed thinking Development expertise Dissemination expertise User engagement … Using a community can enable better products to be delivered Understanding
Why Community-Led? Its what we expect these days: We encourage students to take responsibility for aspects of their own learning Why should we expect all ideas & initiatives in projects to develop within projects teams, advisory groups and input from funders?  It provides diversity: Staff development Exploitation of new ideas, technologies, … Avoids the “ We tried that in the C20 th  and it didn’t work ” mentality Challenges orthodoxies which may no longer  be valid …  Understanding
Why Now? Why is it appropriate to take this approach now? Technical infrastructure in place: RSS, ‘cool URIs’, clean(-ish) HTML and CSS Web 2.0 focus on user-generated content Diverse set of application environments available Easy to use (users won’t want training or read manuals) Understanding This covers the technical reasons why it is timely to exploit social networking software. Non-technical reasons are out-of-scope for this talk.
Why Not? What if Google, … goes out of business? What about copyright, data protection, …? But I’m a developer – I’ll be out of a job   I’m a manager – what about use in mission-critical areas?   Understanding
Why Not? Really? What if Google, … goes out of business? What about copyright, data protection, …? But I’m a developer – I’ll be out of a job   I’m a manager – what about use in mission-critical areas?   Can you guarantee ongoing provision of your deliverables, your institutions’ or the government’s? And what if Google thrives?  Risk assessment & management; we’ve been here in 1990s - and the world may change (cf. YouTube & Warner music)  World doesn’t owe you a job writing software which isn’t needed!  You’ll have a job doing the integration, support, … Risk assessment & management; provision of alternatives; migration plans; user engagement; sharing experiences, … Understanding “ Risk Assessment For Use Of Third Party Web 2.0 Services ”, QA Focus
Why Not? (2) We need to do server-side proper development Our SysAdmins say: Too busy It’s complicated; we’d need to upgrade Perl libraries, install new version of database, wait until a full moon; … Sorry, can’t open that port – “There be dragons” Add you own story here
Why Not? Really? (2) It’s not just about del.icio.us, Flickr, Facebook, … You can also use third party ISPs, which can provide 2-click interfaces to applications e.g. Site5’s Fantastico/Cpanel provides: Moodle Wordpress Drupla PHP … … Or use Amazon S3 / EC2 to rent storage, CPU cycles, APIs, … For ~ $6/month!
The IWMW Community (1) Institutional Web management profession: Newish profession (circa 1994-5) Initial enthusiasm, then awareness of role as pawn in institutional power struggles   Establishment of: web-support  then  website-info-mgt  mailing lists set up in mid-1990s Institutional Web Management Workshop (IWMW) established in 1997 Held annually since then 150+ delegates attend Now several generations of participants Examples
The IWMW Community (2) Strengths of the community: Shared goals and interests Shared challenges (lack of resources, unreasonable expectations, difficult users   , …) Annual F2F helps community building Weaknesses: Focus on helping with specific (often technical) problems and sharing solutions Limited opportunities for strategic thinking Limited exploitation strengths of community and social network technology (still many primarily using JISCMail lists – but some isolated uses of blogs, wikis, …) Examples
IWMW 2007 IWMW 2007: University of York on 16-18 July (now fully subscribed) Building on technical innovations from previous years (WiFi network, real-time chat, wikis, folksonomies, …) This year: Innovation Competition encouraging submissions which are: User-focussed Light-weight ‘ Cool’ – user response of “Wow”, “I wish I’d thought of that!”, “We must do that”, … Examples
Supporting The Competition (1) To encourage community-led development work: Provide data for techies to exploit Provide open access (CC) to avoid legal problems Examples http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/ events/workshops/iwmw/rss-feeds
Supporting The Competition (2) To encourage community-led development work: Provide data for techies to exploit Provide open access (CC) to avoid legal problems Provide service which interests users (& funders – is the UK community involved?) Provide open service which others can build on (e.g. timelines, clouds, …) http://www.acme.com/GeoRSS/?xmlsrc=... Note icon may represent multiple speakers from an institution or region
Managing The Risks What if nobody enters the competition? Avoiding The Problem We can incentivize the competition (a prize –  depending on budget and sponsorship, kudos, …) We can highlight personal benefits (add to CV) We can highlight organisational benefits  (University of X won an award for Y) We can encourage our friends to enter We can provide examples of developments ourselves  Learning For Next Year We can gain feedback and encourage competitors & non-competitors to share their experiences We can encourage them to join in next year (its new for them and they weren’t sure of what to do) Examples
Ideas For Competition Some ideas (but should I be explicit?): Location map of all 11 IWMWs. Done – but can it be enhanced (e.g. cloud maps from abstracts of speakers’ talks) Map of location of all plenary speakers (done) Delegate maps. Are we attracting participants from across the country? Which institutions have never attended? What’s the carbon cost of delegates travelling? (Note data protection, privacy, etc. issues) Timeline. V0.1 done – but potential for richer timelines RSS feeds – many provided for use by others YouTube video, Second Life, … Examples
About The Learning The competition may be fun and useful applications developed More importantly it’s an opportunity to: Try something new Gain feedback from friendly audience Gain understanding of potential of lightweight Web 2.0 technologies Understand how your data can be reused by others (to everyone’s benefit) Break down the ‘we must do everything ourselves’ attitude Examples
Application To Emerge Emerge Community Generated Activity Policy RFC For a community to be successful: Members have common interests Feeling of openness Members need to develop Links with others Energy and enthusiasm This relates closely with the approaches taken with the IWMW community Emerge See  Community generated activity policy ,  <http://jiscemerge.org.uk/vle/mod/resource/view.php?id=14>
Groupings How should effective groups emerge? Common interests in topics or diversity of interests? Common personal interests (fellow techies) or diversity of interests? And what other groups may there be? Suggestions Topic Areas PLEs Virtual environments Mobile technologies Usability … Personal Areas Technical expertise User engagement Advocacy Writing, scripting, broadcasting ,… Speaking, performing, role-playing, …  Research … What  Else? … …
Questions For Discussion Some issues: Are you happy with the rationale for community-led activities? What areas do you think would be appropriate as community-led activities? How will you progress this? What other issues would you like to discuss today? Suggestions
My Thoughts Simple individual activities: Sharing info on good venues for events:  e.g. with WiFi) – del.icio.us tag of  recommended-venues  ( recommended-hotels , …) … Group activity: risk assessment for Web 2.0 services Contribute to wiki (Wikipedia?) on governance of service (ownership, bank balance, …) Whois++ to establish dates, ownership, .. Document experiences (use cases, successes, failures, management approaches, …) Make this stuff open and widely available Suggestions
Questions Any questions?

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Community Led Activities

  • 1. Community-Led Activities Brian Kelly UKOLN University of Bath Bath BA2 7AY Email [email_address] UKOLN is supported by: http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/events/online/emerge-2007-06/ About This Talk Questions to be addressed: What useful work can be done without significant project funding? What are the benefits of community-led activities? How can community activities help to enhance project proposals? How can community-led activities help to embed project-funded deliverables? This work is licensed under a Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.0 licence (but note caveat) Resources bookmarked using ‘ jisc-emerge-2007-06-07 ' tag
  • 2. About The Speaker Brian Kelly: UK Web Focus – an advisory post which provides advices on making effective use of the on Web (with focus on standards, emerging Web technologies) Involved in Web work since January 1993 Providing support on Web 2.0 / social networks to Emerge project About UKOLN: National centre of expertise in digital information management Based at the University of Bath Funded by MLA and JISC to support the cultural heritage and higher/further education sectors Introduction
  • 3. About This Talk View of history of development work (over-simplified): Project proposals developed by individuals, institutions or groups in competition with others Successful bids develop deliverables, with community engagement limited to formal tasks Vision for exploiting Communities of Practices: Benefits of openness being appreciated (open source, open standards, open data, …) Benefits of social networks being appreciated ( wisdom of crowds ) Social networking technologies are pervasive We (individuals, groups, institutions) can be enriched by community engagement Introduction Note current debate on approaches for institutional repositories
  • 4. IR Debate Will formal projects be slow to respond to changes to the environment (technical, cultural)? Can projects do “quick and dirty” – even if that’s what users want? Are we repeating Coloured Books? http://www.slideshare.net/eduservfoundation/ http://rmfuturewatch.blogspot.com/
  • 5. Aims of Session This talk (and follow-up discussion) aims to: Provide a better understanding of benefits of community-led activities Give examples of community-led activities Invite suggestions and discussion on community-led activities for Emerge community Introduction “ If not us, then who? If not now, then when?” Within the context of U&I / Emerge’s remit for rapid development, testing, learning, iteration, etc. which may lead to new best practices for development work
  • 6. Why Community? Successful deliverables require range of expertise: Visionary, innovative thinking User-focussed thinking Development expertise Dissemination expertise User engagement … Using a community can enable better products to be delivered Understanding
  • 7. Why Community-Led? Its what we expect these days: We encourage students to take responsibility for aspects of their own learning Why should we expect all ideas & initiatives in projects to develop within projects teams, advisory groups and input from funders? It provides diversity: Staff development Exploitation of new ideas, technologies, … Avoids the “ We tried that in the C20 th and it didn’t work ” mentality Challenges orthodoxies which may no longer be valid … Understanding
  • 8. Why Now? Why is it appropriate to take this approach now? Technical infrastructure in place: RSS, ‘cool URIs’, clean(-ish) HTML and CSS Web 2.0 focus on user-generated content Diverse set of application environments available Easy to use (users won’t want training or read manuals) Understanding This covers the technical reasons why it is timely to exploit social networking software. Non-technical reasons are out-of-scope for this talk.
  • 9. Why Not? What if Google, … goes out of business? What about copyright, data protection, …? But I’m a developer – I’ll be out of a job  I’m a manager – what about use in mission-critical areas? Understanding
  • 10. Why Not? Really? What if Google, … goes out of business? What about copyright, data protection, …? But I’m a developer – I’ll be out of a job  I’m a manager – what about use in mission-critical areas? Can you guarantee ongoing provision of your deliverables, your institutions’ or the government’s? And what if Google thrives? Risk assessment & management; we’ve been here in 1990s - and the world may change (cf. YouTube & Warner music) World doesn’t owe you a job writing software which isn’t needed! You’ll have a job doing the integration, support, … Risk assessment & management; provision of alternatives; migration plans; user engagement; sharing experiences, … Understanding “ Risk Assessment For Use Of Third Party Web 2.0 Services ”, QA Focus
  • 11. Why Not? (2) We need to do server-side proper development Our SysAdmins say: Too busy It’s complicated; we’d need to upgrade Perl libraries, install new version of database, wait until a full moon; … Sorry, can’t open that port – “There be dragons” Add you own story here
  • 12. Why Not? Really? (2) It’s not just about del.icio.us, Flickr, Facebook, … You can also use third party ISPs, which can provide 2-click interfaces to applications e.g. Site5’s Fantastico/Cpanel provides: Moodle Wordpress Drupla PHP … … Or use Amazon S3 / EC2 to rent storage, CPU cycles, APIs, … For ~ $6/month!
  • 13. The IWMW Community (1) Institutional Web management profession: Newish profession (circa 1994-5) Initial enthusiasm, then awareness of role as pawn in institutional power struggles  Establishment of: web-support then website-info-mgt mailing lists set up in mid-1990s Institutional Web Management Workshop (IWMW) established in 1997 Held annually since then 150+ delegates attend Now several generations of participants Examples
  • 14. The IWMW Community (2) Strengths of the community: Shared goals and interests Shared challenges (lack of resources, unreasonable expectations, difficult users  , …) Annual F2F helps community building Weaknesses: Focus on helping with specific (often technical) problems and sharing solutions Limited opportunities for strategic thinking Limited exploitation strengths of community and social network technology (still many primarily using JISCMail lists – but some isolated uses of blogs, wikis, …) Examples
  • 15. IWMW 2007 IWMW 2007: University of York on 16-18 July (now fully subscribed) Building on technical innovations from previous years (WiFi network, real-time chat, wikis, folksonomies, …) This year: Innovation Competition encouraging submissions which are: User-focussed Light-weight ‘ Cool’ – user response of “Wow”, “I wish I’d thought of that!”, “We must do that”, … Examples
  • 16. Supporting The Competition (1) To encourage community-led development work: Provide data for techies to exploit Provide open access (CC) to avoid legal problems Examples http://www.ukoln.ac.uk/web-focus/ events/workshops/iwmw/rss-feeds
  • 17. Supporting The Competition (2) To encourage community-led development work: Provide data for techies to exploit Provide open access (CC) to avoid legal problems Provide service which interests users (& funders – is the UK community involved?) Provide open service which others can build on (e.g. timelines, clouds, …) http://www.acme.com/GeoRSS/?xmlsrc=... Note icon may represent multiple speakers from an institution or region
  • 18. Managing The Risks What if nobody enters the competition? Avoiding The Problem We can incentivize the competition (a prize – depending on budget and sponsorship, kudos, …) We can highlight personal benefits (add to CV) We can highlight organisational benefits (University of X won an award for Y) We can encourage our friends to enter We can provide examples of developments ourselves Learning For Next Year We can gain feedback and encourage competitors & non-competitors to share their experiences We can encourage them to join in next year (its new for them and they weren’t sure of what to do) Examples
  • 19. Ideas For Competition Some ideas (but should I be explicit?): Location map of all 11 IWMWs. Done – but can it be enhanced (e.g. cloud maps from abstracts of speakers’ talks) Map of location of all plenary speakers (done) Delegate maps. Are we attracting participants from across the country? Which institutions have never attended? What’s the carbon cost of delegates travelling? (Note data protection, privacy, etc. issues) Timeline. V0.1 done – but potential for richer timelines RSS feeds – many provided for use by others YouTube video, Second Life, … Examples
  • 20. About The Learning The competition may be fun and useful applications developed More importantly it’s an opportunity to: Try something new Gain feedback from friendly audience Gain understanding of potential of lightweight Web 2.0 technologies Understand how your data can be reused by others (to everyone’s benefit) Break down the ‘we must do everything ourselves’ attitude Examples
  • 21. Application To Emerge Emerge Community Generated Activity Policy RFC For a community to be successful: Members have common interests Feeling of openness Members need to develop Links with others Energy and enthusiasm This relates closely with the approaches taken with the IWMW community Emerge See Community generated activity policy , <http://jiscemerge.org.uk/vle/mod/resource/view.php?id=14>
  • 22. Groupings How should effective groups emerge? Common interests in topics or diversity of interests? Common personal interests (fellow techies) or diversity of interests? And what other groups may there be? Suggestions Topic Areas PLEs Virtual environments Mobile technologies Usability … Personal Areas Technical expertise User engagement Advocacy Writing, scripting, broadcasting ,… Speaking, performing, role-playing, … Research … What Else? … …
  • 23. Questions For Discussion Some issues: Are you happy with the rationale for community-led activities? What areas do you think would be appropriate as community-led activities? How will you progress this? What other issues would you like to discuss today? Suggestions
  • 24. My Thoughts Simple individual activities: Sharing info on good venues for events: e.g. with WiFi) – del.icio.us tag of recommended-venues ( recommended-hotels , …) … Group activity: risk assessment for Web 2.0 services Contribute to wiki (Wikipedia?) on governance of service (ownership, bank balance, …) Whois++ to establish dates, ownership, .. Document experiences (use cases, successes, failures, management approaches, …) Make this stuff open and widely available Suggestions