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What Are Your Top 5 Web Learning Tools?

What's in your Learning 2.0 Tool Belt?
What's in your Learning 2.0 Tool Belt?

While speaking at a conference over the weekend, I noted that I haven’t participated in a lot of formal professional development over the past few years. Maybe I’ve attended a class, workshop, or conference here or there, but the biggest chunk of my learning has happened informally, and mostly on the Web. That got me thinking about the tools I use the most these days for learning. I hope you’ll comment to share your own with other readers, but to start with, here are the five I use most:

Search

Google is the starting point for pretty much everything. And when I land on a blog, Web site, or wiki that looks like a good resource, the search box is often the first place I go. I also set Google searches as one way of tracking a topic or issue.

RSS

My RSS reader is pretty much my own little personal learning management system. I’m subscribed to hundreds of feeds (I really need to do some clean-up!), and I’ve got these feeds organized into folders and tagged in all sorts of ways. (Not real clear on what RSS or an RSS reader are? Check out Commoncraft’s brief, entertaining, yet highly educational video on RSS in Plain English.)

Podcasts

A colleague gave me an iPod a while back in appreciation for some consulting I provided, and I have been addicted ever since. I regularly listen to podcasts across a wide range of topics. I also learn a lot by creating the Radio Free Learning podcast, which I plan to kick back into gear in the next couple of weeks. Favorites? Marketing Over Coffee, Duct Tape Marketing, pretty much any TED talk, and Sound Opinions (okay, that last one is more for personal pleasure than professional development – but I do learn a lot!).

Bookmarking

I have no idea how many bookmarks I have at this point. A lot of them are local to my laptop, but I’ve gotten more and more in the happen of putting them on Delicious. This is the main way I find my way back to things I would otherwise forget. It is also an area where I need to improve my habits some – e.g., being better about writing descriptions for bookmarks and also spending more time revisiting and mining my bookmarks on occasion.

Blogging

I put blogging last because it is the tool that plays the biggest role in transforming all of the above into learning, at least as I define it. For me, nothing beats having to write about a topic or issue for really consolidating my knowledge and reaching higher levels of learning. I write a great deal more than actually winds up in my blog posts, and I also post on the blog on my personal Web site as well as on the site for my company, Tagoras.

Runner up: Twitter

I use Twitter to tag (#learningmonitor) items (and encourage other to tag them) that I might include in the monthly Learning Monitor newsletter as well as to share other resources I come across. More importantly, I learn about a lot of new things from following other tweeps. One of those tweeps is Lindy Dreyer. You might want to also check out her brief list of good people to follow if you are interested in informal learning (provided by Jeff Hurt). Who knows, Twitter might bump one of the other tools above out of the top five at some point.

How about you? What are the key tools in your learning mix? I’d be truly grateful if you would comment and share with other readers here at Mission to Learn.

Jeff Cobb
Mission to Learn

P.S. – If you enjoy what you read here on Mission to Learn, I’d be truly grateful if you would consider subscribing to the RSS feed.

6 thoughts on “What Are Your Top 5 Web Learning Tools?”

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  3. Hey Lindy – Great to have a social fish drop by! Wikis are a great addition. My luck with them as a learning experience has been pretty limited so far, but you’ve inspired me to try to make better use of them. – Jeff

  4. My list is pretty similar, except I’m not really a podcast girl…
    1) Blogs and tweets from people I trust
    2) My own blog, where I synthesize what I learn
    3) Google search for finding people I don’t already know/specific topics
    4) Chats – whatever the tool (sometimes Twitter, sometimes Meebo, and many others)
    5) Wikis – I love finding a good wiki on a topic, and perhaps even contributing to one. Wikis are really hard to do well and they require a very dedicated community of champions, so when you find a good one, it’s like a learning pot of gold.

  5. Neel – Thanks for commenting. I have used Google custom search a whole lot – I definitely should more. Debated whether to include YouTube, but since I end up putting videos on my iPod more often than not, I just mixed it in with podcasts. I’ll be interested to see if anyone else comments on Twitter. Seems like people have fairly strong opinions about whether it is really a learning resource or not. – Jeff

  6. 1 ) Google customized search engine – Easy to create one, lets me search within my top 25 odd learning resources.
    2) Google RSS reader
    3) Podcasts
    4) Bookmarking with Diigo –
    5) Videos on Youtube.com – Medicine is a very visual science, you need to see it to understand it.

    Blogging is more of a teaching service( rather than learning), and twitter barely makes a learning resource.

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