Publication | Closed Access
Web 2.0: A New Wave of Innovation for Teaching and Learning?
812
Citations
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References
2006
Year
Unknown Venue
E-learningEducationContent CreationCommunicationJournalismSocial MediaNew WaveWeb PageContent AnalysisWeb LiteracyWeb 2.0Learning SciencesUser-generated ContentLearning AnalyticsOnline Course DevelopmentHypertextSocial WebTechnologySocial ComputingSharp BreakOnline EducationPage MetaphorComputer-based EducationArtsDigital Learning
© 2 0 0 6 B r y a n A l e x a n d e r chronological structure implies a different rhetorical purpose than a Web page, which has no inherent timeliness. That altered rhetoric helped shape a different audience, the blogging public, with its emergent social practices of blogrolling, extensive hyperlinking, and discussion threads attached not to pages but to content chunks within them. Reading and searching this world is significantly different from searching the entire Web world. Still, social software does not indicate a sharp break with the old but, rather, the gradual emergence of a new type of practice. These sections of the Web break away from the page metaphor. Rather than following the notion of the Web as book, they are predicated on microcontent. Blogs are about posts, not pages. Wikis are streams of conversation, revision, amendment, and truncation. Podcasts are shuttled between Web sites, RSS feeds, and diverse players. These content blocks can be saved, summarized, addressed, copied, quoted, and built into new projects. Browsers respond to this boom in
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