Obama not only used the internet to campaign, but he will also use it to
govern.
HERNDON, Va., Oct 23, 2008 /PRNewswire via COMTEX/ -- Over the last 13 months, ePals, Inc., has seen a substantial increase in the number of educators passionate about using online learning methods and leveraging "social networking" technologies in their classrooms. Supporting this trend, adoptions of its free, award-winning, online Global Learning Community,
Education technology developer Saba this week debuted a new solution it describes as an "enterprise social networking platform." The new system, Saba Social, is designed to extend Saba's collaboration platform and provide a vehicle for delivering and capturing informal, peer-to-peer learning and knowledge exchange.
Classroom 2.0 is a social networking site for those interested in Web 2.0 and collaborative technologies in education.
Social networks will bring large (positive) changes to educational methods. Follow this debate at the Economist.
This is a social network with an academic purpose. You can use this site to form study groups, ask/answer questions, search subjects and much more. It is free to use!
Itâs no secret that Facebook, which started as a networking playground
for college kids, is graying, and that the percentage of active members
who are over 25 years old and out of school has risen to some 40
percent of the overall population of about 45 million. The influx raises
questions. Will the loss of the campus sensibility and the youthful
gestalt dilute the Facebook experience?