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January 28, 2004
James McGee on thinking in public &/vs thinking collaboratively
Posted by Clay Shirky
Interesting James McGee post, from April of last year, on the
relationship between thinking out loud and thinking together:
My problem is this. Most of the technology tools for supporting thinking together (e.g. discussion forums, threaded discussion, wikis) depend on skills and norms that I've found to be rare in practice and challenging to promote. My intuitions tell me that there are important differences with weblogs that address at least some of these issues. [...]
One of the primary reasons that thinking together is hard is that it requires both that we think in public and that we think collaboratively. I suspect that thinking together fails at least as often because we don't know how to think in public as it does because we don't know how to do it collaboratively. Further I think that order matters. You need to learn how to think in public first. Then you can work on developing skills to think collaboratively.
He goes on to tie this to the way weblogs can make linking public and collaborative thinking easier (relevant to a panel Liz is putting together on weblogs and collaboration.)
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