Gauri's mumblings..
Wednesday, February 08, 2012
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Best Knowledge Management book for the holidays?
Recently, @jschunter asked a question on the KM4Dev mailing list on recommendations for KM related books to read during holidays. In the true spirit of knowledge sharing, he received a series of recommendations. I put together a summary of the recommendations for my own benefit but have decided to share it via the blog for others who are not on the list but are interested in KM/Leadership/Change Management. Enjoy!
Recommendations in no specific order:
Do you have a favourite KM/Leadership book which has not been mentioned here?
Recommendations in no specific order:
- Everything is Obvious by Duncan Watts
- The Strategic Management of Intellectual Capital and Organizational Knowledge (2002) by Choo and Bontis (ed.)
- The Way of Knowledge: Managing the Unmanageable. Stowe Boyd 2000.
- Implizites Wissen in Organisationen. Konzepte, Methoden und Ansätze im Wissensmanagement. Olaf Katenkamp. VS Verlag, 2011
- The Leader Who Had No Title: A Modern Fable on Real Success in Business and in Life by Robin Sharma
- Squirrel Inc.: A Fable of Leadership through Storytelling by Stephen Denning
- Building the Knowledge Management Network, Figallo and Rhine (2002)
- Net Work: A Practical Guide to Creating and Sustaining Networks at Work and in the World by Patti Anklam
- Overcoming Organizational Defences: Facilitating Organizational Learning by Chris Argyris and Donal Schön
- Practical wisdom: the way to do the things the right way by Berry Schwartz and Kenneth Sharpe
- The Power of Positive Deviance: How Unlikely Innovators Solve the World's Toughest Problems by Richard Pascale et. al.
- On Organizational Learning 1975 and 1995 by Edgar Schon and Chris Argyris
- A Wiki for Business Rules in Open Vocabulary, Executable English, Adrian Walker
- Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas Hofstadter
- Pedagogy of the Oppressed is the most widely known of educator Paulo Freire's works.
- Black Mass: Apocalyptic Religion and the Death of Utopia - John N. Gray
- Anything goes, Paul Karl Feyerabends Argumentation in "Against Method" - Paul Karl Feyerabend
- Beyond Knowledge Management: What Every Leader Should Know Jay Liebowitz (2012)
- Presence: An Exploration of Profound Change in People, Organizations, and Society - One of the authors of Peter Senge of The Fifth Discipline.
- Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die by Chip Heath
- The Ten Faces of Innovation: strategies for heightening creativity by Tom Kelley with Jonathan Littman
Do you have a favourite KM/Leadership book which has not been mentioned here?
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
You can be part of the #sfrome social reporting team. Here is how..
As you may already know, we are counting down days to the Second Global AgriKnowledge Share Fair which is scheduled to take place at IFAD from 26-29 September. This event, jointly organized by Bioversity International, Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), International Fund for Agriculture Development (IFAD), Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA), The Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) and World Food Programme (WFP) brings together colleagues from Rome-based agencies as well as partner organizations to share projects, lessons learned and emerging trends in the areas of food security, price volatility, climate change, ICT4D, social media and green innovations.
The Share Fair promises to deliver a wealth of knowledge featuring over 160 presenters from all over the world who will share their creative and innovative experiences and knowledge. Participants will have an opportunity to learn, share, connect and influence future direction.
We encourage all participants to use social media channels and report live from the event. Here is how you can engage:
The organizational tags are:
For more information, contact us at share-fair [at] cgiar.org.
The Share Fair promises to deliver a wealth of knowledge featuring over 160 presenters from all over the world who will share their creative and innovative experiences and knowledge. Participants will have an opportunity to learn, share, connect and influence future direction.
We encourage all participants to use social media channels and report live from the event. Here is how you can engage:
- Tweet and Retweet content from Share Fair: http://sharefair2009.blogspot.com/search/label/sfrome
- Share your own photos and images from the event by joining the Share Fair Group: http://www.flickr.com/groups/sharefair09/
- Presentations will be shared via: http://www.slideshare.net/sharefair09/
- Follow our tweets: http://twitter.com/sharefairs/
- Videos: http://www.youtube.com/user/sharefairs
- Blog from sessions you attend either through your personal blog or by sending your posts to share-fair@cgiar.org
The organizational tags are:
- #ifad – Twitter account @ifadnews
- #unfao – Twitter account @faonews
- #wfp – Twitter account @wfp
- #bioversity
For more information, contact us at share-fair [at] cgiar.org.
Thursday, August 04, 2011
Tips and Tricks for working with Wikipedia
Wikipedia -- the free online multi-lingual collaborative encyclopedia -- is a treasure trove of information about food security, crops, livestock, forestry, fisheries and other " FAO subjects." FAO staff are now being encouraged to edit Wikipedia articles in their areas of technical expertise. To this end, we organized a discussion session on the basics of Wikipedia for which I prepared few "Tips and Tricks" (PDF) on editing and working with Wikipedia. They are based on experiences our team had while organizing the social reporting for the WSFS 2009 as well as those shared by my colleagues Michael Riggs, George Kourous, Mehmet Korkmaz and Alexander Jones.
References:
References:
- FAO Web Guidelines on Wikipedia
- CGIAR/FAO/UNICEF Knowledge Sharing Toolkit on Wikis
- Wikipedia 101 for Brands
- What Wikipedia is not
- Wikipedia Policies and Guidelines
If you have additional tips please share them here.
Tuesday, August 02, 2011
Publication compiling case studies of the 2010 Latin American and Caribbean Knowledge Share Fair now online
This publication, Feria del Conocimiento América Latina y el Caribe: Casos destacados en agricultura, desarrollo y seguridad alimentaria, only available in Spanish, is now available on line. The publication gathers the highlights and conclusions of the Knowledge Share Fair Latin America and Caribbean, held 25-27 May 2010, at the International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT) in Cali, Colombia.
The main objectives of the Fair were to demonstrate how the active and strategic participation of knowledge improves the effectiveness, efficiency, and impact of any work, while giving participants, some 200 professionals from over 70 organizations and 18 countries, an opportunity to experiment with knowledge sharing tools and methodologies and share and learn good practices. Participants were also able to socialize experiences related to knowledge management in agriculture, development, and food security.
The event, organized by the Information and Communications Technology and Knowledge Management (ICT-KM) Program of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), and the Knowledge Management for Development (KM4Dev) community, served to gather experiences related to rural development, mainly agriculture and livestock production, and exemplify what’s happening in terms of knowledge management in Latin America.
Of the numerous case studies presented at the fair, eight related to agriculture, development, and food security—key issues addressed during the event— were selected for inclusion in the publication and serve to illustrate how knowledge-related processes involve complementary technological, technical, and human factors.
Five case studies (Condesan, Prodarnet, Preval, INIA, CIAT) illustrate purely regional experiences while three (CIARD, Vercon, and SGRP) provide an interesting global perspective.
As matter of conclusion, the authors pose the need that knowledge sharing be explicitly used to promote learning between actors. “Knowledge currently plays a key role in many development policies, accompanied by a important effort of the informatics sector and ICTs in general. Nonetheless, the learning and social engineering that accompany knowledge should become the main forces promoting knowledge and innovation, not the contrary, which is what happens nowadays.”
Although the publication is in Spanish, a translation of titles of sections and case studies has been provided.
Click to download:
- Complete publication (11 MB)
- Cover
- Content
- About the Fair (by Simone Staiger-Rivas)
- Introduction (by Camilo Villa)
- Condesan: E-forums of the Consortium for the Sustainable Development of the Andean Ecoregion: 17 years of learning between people and tools (by Musuq Briceño and Alejandra Visscher)
- Prodarnet: Virtual networks for promoting rural agribusinesses in Latin America (by Hernando Riveros and Marvin Blanco)
- Preval: Image assessment: A communications proposal for social learning (by Emma Rotondo)
- INIA: Participatory research as a knowledge management process (by María Marta Albicette)
- CIAT: Innovation facilitators in rural agribusinesses: Market knowledge as a compass for innovation (by Érika Eliana Mosquera and Jhon Jairo Hurtado)
- CIARD: From words to action: Information on agricultural research available to the public, fully accessible and applicable (by Nadia Manning-Thomas and Enrica Porcari)
- Vercon: Knowledge sharing among agricultural research and extension systems (by Sophie Treinen)
- SGRP: Motivating scientists to share knowledge in the Global Public Goods (GPG2) project (by Maria Alejandra Jorge)
- Conclusion (by Sebastião Ferreira, Simone Staiger and Camilo Villa)
Tags:
case studies,
outputs,
products,
Share Fair,
sharefair,
sharefaircali
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