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MW2010: Unconference Sessions


jtrant's picture

By jtrant - Posted on 08 September 2009

Once again, we've set aside some time at Museums and the Web 2010, on the afternoon of Thursday April 15, for ad hoc un-conference sessions.

What is an un-conference?

The un-conference model emerged from the popularity of “self-organizing” BarCamps, and Open Space informal meetings, where the agenda is set by the attendees, on the spot. People come to ‘camp’ events interested in common issues and ready to share.

We’ve kept this format as a part of MW2010, to offer a place to discuss emerging issues, pose [and answer] questions that are on your mind, and do it all in a less formal setting. It’s early in the meeting, so that you can find others who share your interests, and pursue those connections throughout the rest of the week.

There are a few principles to an un-conference:

  • anyone can introduce a discussion topic for a session
  • everyone is expected to engage, participate and contribute. If you hate public speaking, offer to take notes and blog them for everyone to share, or find another creative way to add something.
  • if you find
    yourself somewhere that you are not comfortable, follow the "Rule of Two Feet": use your own two feet to move somewhere else where you can
    contribute.


The session will be in two parts, pitches and breakouts.

Un-conference Pitches: 3:30 - ~4:15 pm

Got something you want to discuss? Looking for people interested in the same things you are? Make a pitch and form an un-conference session.

  • a pitch is succinct – it can take no more than 3 minutes to express, ideally less.
  • your pitch should persuade the attendees to want to discuss it further  – open questions are much more inviting than your answers

Things to remember about pitching – un-conference sessions are:

  • topical and current – breaking news and emerging issues are the most engaging
  • informal and conversational – this is not the place to give the paper you forgot to propose
  • non-commercial – you can find out about products and services in the Exhibit Hall
  • distinct from things going on elsewhere on the MW2010 program – don't trump your presentation later in the week by pitching the same thing here

We'll listen to all of the pitches together, and assign discussion spaces based on a 'show of hands' indicating interest.

Unconference Breakout Sessions: ~4:15-5:30 pm

After the pitches, groups will move to breakout areas for discussion. You'll have a good chunk of time to get your teeth into a question.  Then, we’ll all get back together for a reception in the Exhibit Hall.

Want to test the water?

Try out your idea in a comment here. See if others respond. Generate some intrerest, and be sure you'll have the best conversations
you can @ MW2010.

mia's picture

I wrote up some thoughts the other day, mostly about linked data but also about how we could use microformats etc.  I'd quite like to experiment and use different formats on two existing sites and see how that affects their SEO.

More at http://museum-api.pbworks.com/Science-Museum-linke...

nator's picture

Lots of good stuff in that document.  As I mentioned on the wiki I haven't gotten anything actually done around linked data / RDFa, but I have done a lot of thinking about it.  Hoping we can get a few like-minded people together in a week and start to come up with a plan to move forward on some of these ideas.

 

Romaric's picture

This comment has been moved here.

rjurban's picture

At MW2009 we had a great unconference session that discussed the "semantic web" (and the "Semantic Web") that resulted in some tangible progress (thanks to Mia's "Do one thing" challenge).

This MW2010 unconference session would extend that conversation with a focus on implementation formats.

The outcome of the session will be to develop a "do one thing" challenge for 2010.

(thanks to Nate Solas, Mia Ridge and Koven Smith for getting the ball rolling!)

mia's picture

Or maybe even 'if we all map our collections to some simple(ish) Dublin Core and put it on our collections pages as RDFa, is that enough of a win to get things started?'.

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