Difference between revisions of "San Francisco Salon"

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'''*** [http://vimeo.com/25109769 Watch the video] from the event ***'''
  
'''Creative Commons Salon Mountain View: What Does it Mean to Be Open in a Data-Driven World?'''
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In the 21st century we are more connected to each other and to information than ever before. As curious and social creatures living in a digital age, we tend to share and distribute the information we receive at remarkable speed and with remarkable outcomes. The end result? Every single one of us, on any given day, is both a learner and an educator. Some of us are more one than the other; some of us are both at the same time. But every single one of us stands to benefit from a revitalized look at what education means in the 21st century.
  
Watch the video from this event on [http://blip.tv/file/4707025 Blip.tv].
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Join us Monday, June 13 at pariSoma Innovation Loft for a panel discussion exploring the ways we can facilitate this desire to improve learning. How do we maximize the impact of education in a digital age, taking care not to leave anyone behind? How can we set up environments where information is free flowing? How can we shift business as usual so that it is the learners and educators themselves who shape the learning and educating?
  
Our next salon will be held at LinkedIn Headquarters in Mountain View and will feature speakers from LinkedIn, 3taps, and Internet Archive to discuss the increasingly important topic of data as it relates to sharing, privacy, and innovation in the 21st century. Our speakers will each spend a few minutes sharing their personal work and experience with online data, and we will then transition into a panel discussion moderated by Tim O'Reilly, founder of O'Reilly Media, to further explore the topic.
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Come hear how Creative Commons, Open Educational Resources (OER), technology, and openness in general have been crucial in reshaping the way we teach and learn (online, offline, in the classroom and out), and join the discussion of how we can continue to make it so.  
  
CC Salons are informal events that bring people together around 21st century issues such as digital copyright, creativity, and sharing online. We typically have an audience of 30-50 professionals from many different disciplines, and the theme varies from education to science to media, and more.
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Panelists include:
  
Our speakers for the evening include:
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'''Cathy Casserly''' (moderator), CEO, Creative Commons. Cathy’s career is dedicated to openness, and particularly to leveraging possibilities at the boundaries of formal and informal learning to equalize educational opportunity. She has been a long-time advocate of open educational resources (OER). Before CC, Cathy worked at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, where she spearheaded work in the areas of transparency and technology as a Senior Partner and the Vice President of Innovation and Open Networks.
  
'''Peter Brantley''' is the Director of the BookServer Project at the Internet Archive, a San Francisco-based not for profit library. He writes widely on the transformations in libraries and publishing, and most recently hosted the Books in Browsers conference in San Francisco. Peter has significant experience with academic research libraries and digital library development programs, and was previously the Executive Director of the Digital Library Federation. He is also the co-founder of the Open Book Alliance.
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'''David Bill''', Director of Educational Technology at the Urban School of San Francisco. As a teacher and director of academic technology, David has used Creative Commons materials in and out of the classroom. David is an educator consumed by the idea of improving our educational landscape. To him, learning is not something forced but rather an exploration that can and should be driven by being an inquisitive and passionate problem solver. In order to create such a learning environment, David focuses his energy on the intersection of Design Thinking, open educational resources, learning spaces, instructional models, and the power of technology in education..
  
'''Karen Gifford''' leads the business development efforts at [http://3taps.com/ 3taps], a platform for exchanges of all kinds. 3taps searches in real time for postings – transaction-specific information about items offered for exchange, such as a job offer or a watch for sale – across a universe that includes the Internet and Twitter. Prior to joining 3taps, Karen worked as a Senior Director at Promontory Financial Group and as Counsel and Officer at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.  
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'''Pete Forsyth''', Owner and Lead Consultant at Wiki Strategies. Pete is an Internet and communications consultant with deep expertise in online peer production communities, specifically the production of open educational resources using wiki-based web sites like Wikipedia. Pete's most recent engagement has been as the Wikimedia Foundation’s first Public Outreach Officer, working with Wikimedia’s vast network of volunteers and supporters to improve the experience of new project contributors. He was a key architect of the Wikipedia Public Policy Initiative, an innovative pilot project to support professors in the use of Wikipedia editing as a teaching tool.  
  
'''DJ Patil''', Chief Scientist and leader for Analytics and Data Teams at the LinkedIn Corporation. He is responsible for all analytics projects including reporting, web analytics, as well as products on the site that leverage LinkedIn’s unique data set. Some of these products include, People You May Know, Who’s Viewed My Profile, Talent Match, and the other recommendation engines.
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'''Felipe Ortega''', Researcher and Project Manager at Libresoft, research group at University Rey Juan Carlos, Spain. Felipe is one of the main organizers of WikiSym, the premier conference on open collaboration and related technologies for researchers, industry, entrepreneurs and practitioners worldwide, to be held in the Bay Area in October. Felipe develops novel methodologies to analyze open collaborative communities (like FLOSS development projects, Wikipedia and social networks). He has done extensive research with the Wikipedia project and its community of authors. He actively participates in
 +
research, promotion and education/training on libre software, and he is a
 +
strong supporter of open educational resources, open access in scientific
 +
publishing and open data in science.
  
'''Tim O'Reilly''' (moderator) is the founder and CEO of O'Reilly Media, Inc., thought by many to be the best computer book publisher in the world. Tim is a catalyst for change, identifying and evangelizing the knowledge of "alpha geeks" and technology trends before they hit the mainstream through his books, speaking engagements, and blog, the O'Reilly Radar. Known for popularizing the terms "open source" and "Web 2.0," Tim is an activist for open standards and sensible intellectual property laws. In addition to being a visionary, Tim is an entrepreneur: he created Safari Books Online, the first web-native service for online book content, and O'Reilly AlphaTech Ventures, which funds disruptors, innovators, and hackers of the status quo.
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'''Amy Roth''', Research Analyst at Wikimedia Foundation's Public Policy Initiative (PPI). The Public Policy Initiative is a pilot project whereby Professors at public policy programs in universities in the U.S. engage their students to improve articles on the English-language Wikipedia as part of the curriculum. Amy graduated from Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo in Biology with a minor in Biotechnology. She went on to get a masters degree in public policy, during which time she analyzed the largest public health surveys in the nation and worked as a health inspector. Her thesis is a quantitative analysis of qualitative foster youth data; it identifies factors that correlate to an increased likelihood of incarceration for foster youth. Amy's background gives her a lot of experience in both quantitative and qualitative research and she enjoys challenging projects that require creative solutions and specific analysis. As Research Analyst for the PPI, she is tasked with program evaluation and assessing article quality and content improvement in Wikipedia.
  
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No RSVP necessary, but you can let us know you're coming on [http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=104137469677954 Facebook].
  
No RSVP necessary, but you can let us know you're coming on [http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=136521236409731 Facebook] or [http://upcoming.yahoo.com/event/7560667/CA/Mountain-View/Creative-Commons-Salon-What-Does-it-Mean-to-Be-Open-in-a-Data-Driven-World/LinkedIn/ Upcoming].
 
  
 
==== Date & Time ====
 
==== Date & Time ====
  
* Tuesday, January 11, 2011
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* Monday, June 13, 2011
* 6:00- 8:00 PM PST (presentations start at 6:30)
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* 7:00- 9:00 PM PST  
 
* Refreshments provided
 
* Refreshments provided
* Plenty of parking available
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* Free but $5-15 donation suggested
'''LinkedIn'''<br / >  
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* Plenty of street parking
'''2025 Stierlin Court, Unite Conference Room (2nd Floor, enter Building 2025 by the fountain in between Buildings 2025 and 2027), Mountain View, CA 94043'''<br / >
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[http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&source=s_q&hl=en&geocode=&q=2025+Stierlin+Court,+Mountain+View,+CA+94043&sll=37.419096,-122.057934&sspn=0.087527,0.17252&gl=us&ie=UTF8&hq=&hnear=2025+Stierlin+Ct,+Mountain+View,+Santa+Clara,+California+94043&z=16 Google Map/Directions]
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'''pariSoma'''<br / >  
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'''169 11th Street, San Francisco, CA 94103'''<br / >
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[http://maps.google.com/maps?oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&ie=UTF8&q=parisoma&fb=1&gl=us&hq=parisoma&hnear=Oakland,+CA&cid=0,0,9664195992360879058&z=16&iwloc=A Google Map/Directions]
  
 
<h2>[[/Archive|See past SF Salons]]</h2>
 
<h2>[[/Archive|See past SF Salons]]</h2>
[[Category:Salon]] [[Category:Event]]
 
  
 
{{Event
 
{{Event
 
|Event Name=San Francisco Salon
 
|Event Name=San Francisco Salon
 
|Mainurl=http://wiki.creativecommons.org/San_Francisco_Salon
 
|Mainurl=http://wiki.creativecommons.org/San_Francisco_Salon
|date=2011/1/11
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|date=2011/06/13
|end_date=2011/1/11
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|end_date=2011/06/13
|Location=Mountain View, CA, USA
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|Location=San Francisco, CA, USA
 
|EventType=Salon
 
|EventType=Salon
 
|EventCategory=Salon
 
|EventCategory=Salon
 
}}
 
}}
 +
 +
[[Category:Salon]] [[Category:Event]]

Latest revision as of 20:34, 15 September 2013

Salon-sf.png

*** Watch the video from the event ***

In the 21st century we are more connected to each other and to information than ever before. As curious and social creatures living in a digital age, we tend to share and distribute the information we receive at remarkable speed and with remarkable outcomes. The end result? Every single one of us, on any given day, is both a learner and an educator. Some of us are more one than the other; some of us are both at the same time. But every single one of us stands to benefit from a revitalized look at what education means in the 21st century.

Join us Monday, June 13 at pariSoma Innovation Loft for a panel discussion exploring the ways we can facilitate this desire to improve learning. How do we maximize the impact of education in a digital age, taking care not to leave anyone behind? How can we set up environments where information is free flowing? How can we shift business as usual so that it is the learners and educators themselves who shape the learning and educating?

Come hear how Creative Commons, Open Educational Resources (OER), technology, and openness in general have been crucial in reshaping the way we teach and learn (online, offline, in the classroom and out), and join the discussion of how we can continue to make it so.

Panelists include:

Cathy Casserly (moderator), CEO, Creative Commons. Cathy’s career is dedicated to openness, and particularly to leveraging possibilities at the boundaries of formal and informal learning to equalize educational opportunity. She has been a long-time advocate of open educational resources (OER). Before CC, Cathy worked at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, where she spearheaded work in the areas of transparency and technology as a Senior Partner and the Vice President of Innovation and Open Networks.

David Bill, Director of Educational Technology at the Urban School of San Francisco. As a teacher and director of academic technology, David has used Creative Commons materials in and out of the classroom. David is an educator consumed by the idea of improving our educational landscape. To him, learning is not something forced but rather an exploration that can and should be driven by being an inquisitive and passionate problem solver. In order to create such a learning environment, David focuses his energy on the intersection of Design Thinking, open educational resources, learning spaces, instructional models, and the power of technology in education..

Pete Forsyth, Owner and Lead Consultant at Wiki Strategies. Pete is an Internet and communications consultant with deep expertise in online peer production communities, specifically the production of open educational resources using wiki-based web sites like Wikipedia. Pete's most recent engagement has been as the Wikimedia Foundation’s first Public Outreach Officer, working with Wikimedia’s vast network of volunteers and supporters to improve the experience of new project contributors. He was a key architect of the Wikipedia Public Policy Initiative, an innovative pilot project to support professors in the use of Wikipedia editing as a teaching tool.

Felipe Ortega, Researcher and Project Manager at Libresoft, research group at University Rey Juan Carlos, Spain. Felipe is one of the main organizers of WikiSym, the premier conference on open collaboration and related technologies for researchers, industry, entrepreneurs and practitioners worldwide, to be held in the Bay Area in October. Felipe develops novel methodologies to analyze open collaborative communities (like FLOSS development projects, Wikipedia and social networks). He has done extensive research with the Wikipedia project and its community of authors. He actively participates in research, promotion and education/training on libre software, and he is a strong supporter of open educational resources, open access in scientific publishing and open data in science.

Amy Roth, Research Analyst at Wikimedia Foundation's Public Policy Initiative (PPI). The Public Policy Initiative is a pilot project whereby Professors at public policy programs in universities in the U.S. engage their students to improve articles on the English-language Wikipedia as part of the curriculum. Amy graduated from Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo in Biology with a minor in Biotechnology. She went on to get a masters degree in public policy, during which time she analyzed the largest public health surveys in the nation and worked as a health inspector. Her thesis is a quantitative analysis of qualitative foster youth data; it identifies factors that correlate to an increased likelihood of incarceration for foster youth. Amy's background gives her a lot of experience in both quantitative and qualitative research and she enjoys challenging projects that require creative solutions and specific analysis. As Research Analyst for the PPI, she is tasked with program evaluation and assessing article quality and content improvement in Wikipedia.

No RSVP necessary, but you can let us know you're coming on Facebook.


Date & Time

  • Monday, June 13, 2011
  • 7:00- 9:00 PM PST
  • Refreshments provided
  • Free but $5-15 donation suggested
  • Plenty of street parking

pariSoma
169 11th Street, San Francisco, CA 94103
Google Map/Directions

See past SF Salons


Events

Salon in San Francisco, CA, USA

2011/06/13

http://wiki.creativecommons.org/San_Francisco_Salon