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Unconferences – Links

July 26th, 2007

I am storing this away for future reference and to send to some of my colleagues.

Mathemagenic: learning and KM insights

Links on unconferencesWe are talking about “Reboot and other unconferences” at work, so I have been collecting all kinds of relevant links (more at del.icio.us/mathemagenic/unconferences):

An Open-Source Conference: BarCamp by Anders Ramsay – for an impressionistic overview. Also, on “why?”:

More than just an alternative model for facilitating a rich exchange of ideas, BarCamp seems to represent a generational break from conventional professional gatherings. They usually take a year or so to plan, cost tens of thousands of dollars to execute, often have some corporate backing, and are mostly planned over email. In contrast, the first BarCamp was put together in about six days, mostly via instant messaging, SMS, and ad-hoc wikis, for a cost of about $1,500, which is less than the price of a single ticket to some of the more high-end tech conferences. Stripped away are the constructs adopted by major conferences from academia, such as keynotes, posters, formal calls for papers, and peer reviews. Gone too is the presenter/attendee divide, where those not giving talks too often are passive spectators, except maybe for the occasional end-of-talk Q&A.

and

The informal feel of the event also makes people less concerned about presenting fully developed ideas, instead, increasing the comfort-level of throwing out off-the-wall ideas just to see what the response is. And by the same virtue, an audience who, in a more formal setting, might politely listen quietly to a not-so-great presentation, is more comfortable speaking up, maybe even turning the presentation into a workshop to see how a bad idea can be turned into a good one.

Conference vs. Unconference by David Gammel – summarising the alternatives

How-to:

* high-level organisation
o Ten Steps to Organizing a Barcamp by Crystal Williams
o How to DIY Unconference by Kaliya Hamlin
* facilitation and specific tips
o Participatory Conferences by David Gurteen – on specific facilitation techniques
o Improving unconferences by Scott Berkun – on adding a bit of structure to the program in a way that benefits all
o How to run a great unconference session by Scott Berkun – for the participants who propose a session

There is definitely more :)
Continued:

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