tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4721252022557617809.post911392413174959073..comments2008-05-22T17:46:11.004-07:00Comments on PARC Forum Series on "Going Beyond Web2.0": 15. Ed Chi, "Enhancing the Social Web through Augmented Social Cognition research"Ed H. Chihttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06360447323238002978noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4721252022557617809.post-28526635200094628352008-05-22T17:46:00.000-07:002008-05-22T17:46:00.000-07:00We got this feedback from email:I wanted to follow...We got this feedback from email:<BR/><BR/>I wanted to follow up on our many conversations regarding the wonderful<BR/>series on Web 2.0 that you helped assemble at PARC last year. I attended<BR/>them for both professional development, as part of my sabbatical learning,<BR/>and to help our computer science division try to understand how to both<BR/>approach Web 2.0 as a subject, and practice it as a discipline.<BR/><BR/>The speakers, topics, and companies you assembled helped give us a much<BR/>better idea about Web 2.0 as an evolution of human interaction and<BR/>collaboration, and has already spawned both a new Web 2.0 course within our<BR/>division, as well as a larger appreciation of 'Civilization 2.0'.<BR/><BR/>We'd like to follow up on potentially linking to the PARC material as an OER<BR/>(Open Educational Resource) which will allow us to quickly assemble content<BR/>around a foundation of Web 2.0 topics. We are discussing developing an<BR/>iTunesU facility within Foothill and De Anza Colleges, and hope that someday<BR/>you might be repurpose much of the PARC forum archives as podcast material.<BR/><BR/>We live in a world where some of the most important learning goes on in<BR/>seminars such as the PARC Forum series, and hope that someday many of our<BR/>students can benefit from these seminars as much as I did in your series.<BR/><BR/>Kind regards,Ed H. Chihttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06360447323238002978noreply@blogger.com