Weekly GNOSS newsletter: build and share knowledge in class
Hi gnossonaut,
last week we raised a discussion. We wanted you to think about how collaborative environments can define the university of the future, what in the digital ‘agora’ is known as University 2.0. But ..., let’s go further. If you are a teacher or a professor, we propose that you manage the knowledge of a subject or a working group from gnoss.com.
You can build a community with the contents of your subject.
gnoss.com communities make possible a document management that makes visible and traceable the necessary documents to give a class and why not, to generate debate around the topics covered. Work units are shared as resources that can be redone, commented, voted... In this way, the professor doesn’t have to be sending emails, attachments... He builds and shares knowledge in the community and his students access it, communicate and work with him. gnoss.com enables that this activity takes place with the privacy you want: communities can be fully public or have their maximum privacy as ‘private rooms’.
In turn, a gnoss.com community is a space that enables collaborative management of work for a subject, either individually or collectively. It offers great possibilities in the creation of documents: a group of students can write a paper and evolve it in the same space with corrections or new contributions. gnoss.com will
show the history and ensures that no document or later versions are lost. This same concept can be applied to the research groups of a university.
GNOSS guide for… researchers
Did you know that in GNOSS you can...
write as many biographies as you want?
gnoss.com users have a lot of work ;-) The network possibilities for the development of the gnossonauts digital identity are an advantage to those who want to be in the right place at the right time. Because gnoss.com allows you to write as many biographies as you want: one for your work, another one for your specialty, another one in a different language ... From gnoss.com we invite you to consider the advantages of writing your bio (or bios). It will be your ‘business card’ in communities and wherever you go on the Web. Do you want to work your identity? You can start doing so from the link ‘My Profile’ from the dropdown menu. There you’ll find a bar with the ‘Editor of Biographies’. In future newsletters we’ll tell you some tips and examples that can interest you.
Oh! before saying goodbye, this week we recommend to read
Atareq and
Teclado Móvil. You’ll like them.
Enjoy GNOSS! We innovate with you.