This document discusses the development and evolution of social networks over time. It analyzes a case study of a network established to support new entrepreneurs. Data was collected through interviews, surveys, and participant observation over several years to map the network's structure and examine how relationships and dynamics changed. Findings showed the network's structure shifted from transactional to more personal ties and demonstrated the importance of social connections for network operations and how patterns of interaction changed. It concluded qualitative, longitudinal research is needed to better understand network transformation processes.
Methods and Techniques for Community Engagement Dr. John Persico
Some ideas to help foster community engagement in the City of Minneapolis. My partner and I had a contract for two years to help the CIty implement a Community Engagement Process. We developed, tested and deployed a model for CE and also designed some training to support the role out of the model.
Presence To Contribution: A Welcoming Community For People With Intellectual ...LiveWorkPlay
This presentation formed the basis of a webinar delivered through the Community Networks of Specialized Care. The presenter is Keenan Wellar, co-leader and director of communications at LiveWorkPlay in Ottawa. Attending directly and remotely were representatives from about 20 organizations across Ontario.
From 2008-2010, the LiveWorkPlay charitable organization in Ottawa engaged in a successful process of "de-programming" by completing a shift from congregated programs to authentic community-based supports and outcomes based on flexible and individualized person-centered planning. They have been living this new way of being for the past three years and will share what they have learned, with a particular focus on life-changing outcomes for individuals who have an intellectual disability, as well as a "social capital" approach to partnerships with citizens and organizations in support of a more inclusive community.
Methods and Techniques for Community Engagement Dr. John Persico
Some ideas to help foster community engagement in the City of Minneapolis. My partner and I had a contract for two years to help the CIty implement a Community Engagement Process. We developed, tested and deployed a model for CE and also designed some training to support the role out of the model.
Presence To Contribution: A Welcoming Community For People With Intellectual ...LiveWorkPlay
This presentation formed the basis of a webinar delivered through the Community Networks of Specialized Care. The presenter is Keenan Wellar, co-leader and director of communications at LiveWorkPlay in Ottawa. Attending directly and remotely were representatives from about 20 organizations across Ontario.
From 2008-2010, the LiveWorkPlay charitable organization in Ottawa engaged in a successful process of "de-programming" by completing a shift from congregated programs to authentic community-based supports and outcomes based on flexible and individualized person-centered planning. They have been living this new way of being for the past three years and will share what they have learned, with a particular focus on life-changing outcomes for individuals who have an intellectual disability, as well as a "social capital" approach to partnerships with citizens and organizations in support of a more inclusive community.
Facilitating local networks of mutual support amongst marginalised people in ...Iriss
The work of Neighbourhood Networks in providing preventative models of support, and opportunities for mutual support, to people who are marginalised or disadvantaged and who might otherwise receive no support at all and thereby run the risk of entering significant and costly, but nonetheless avoidable crises in their lives.
Contributor: Neighbourhood Networks. (WS05)
Community Engagementand Capacity Buildingin Cultural PlanningEmily Robson
Presentation delivered by Kohl, Community Animator
Ontario Healthy Communities Coalition at The Ontario Rural Council's "Economies in Transition" municipal cultural planning forum in Brockville on November 17, 2008.
This document represents a first attempt at collating the information available on the Internet to understand the term 'communities of practice'. It is not comprehensive, but can help to understand the key features of communities of practice to inform the development of the OER platform.
A basic explanation for communities of practice, and some ideas for designing digital environments to help them thrive. Based on portions of presentations I have given over the last 4-5 years.
Networked Privacy Beyond the Individual: Four Perspectives to ‘Sharing’ / Ai...airilmpnn
Paper presentation at Critical Alternatives 2005, the fifth decennial Aarhus Conference.
Abstract below, the paper is available at: https://goo.gl/RtissL
My dissertation, Interpersonal Boundary Regulation in the Context of Social Network Services, includes a longer discussion of the topics of the paper: https://helda.helsinki.fi/handle/10138/42272
For further publications, see: airilampinen.fi/publications
"Synthesizing prior work, this paper provides conceptual grounding for understanding the dialectic of challenges and opportunities that social network sites present to social life. With the help of the framework of interpersonal boundary regulation, this paper casts privacy as something people do, together, instead of depicting it as a characteristic or a possession. I illustrate interpersonal aspects of networked privacy by outlining four perspectives to ‘sharing’. These perspectives call for a rethink of networked privacy beyond an individual’s online endeavors."
Facilitating local networks of mutual support amongst marginalised people in ...Iriss
The work of Neighbourhood Networks in providing preventative models of support, and opportunities for mutual support, to people who are marginalised or disadvantaged and who might otherwise receive no support at all and thereby run the risk of entering significant and costly, but nonetheless avoidable crises in their lives.
Contributor: Neighbourhood Networks. (WS05)
Community Engagementand Capacity Buildingin Cultural PlanningEmily Robson
Presentation delivered by Kohl, Community Animator
Ontario Healthy Communities Coalition at The Ontario Rural Council's "Economies in Transition" municipal cultural planning forum in Brockville on November 17, 2008.
This document represents a first attempt at collating the information available on the Internet to understand the term 'communities of practice'. It is not comprehensive, but can help to understand the key features of communities of practice to inform the development of the OER platform.
A basic explanation for communities of practice, and some ideas for designing digital environments to help them thrive. Based on portions of presentations I have given over the last 4-5 years.
Networked Privacy Beyond the Individual: Four Perspectives to ‘Sharing’ / Ai...airilmpnn
Paper presentation at Critical Alternatives 2005, the fifth decennial Aarhus Conference.
Abstract below, the paper is available at: https://goo.gl/RtissL
My dissertation, Interpersonal Boundary Regulation in the Context of Social Network Services, includes a longer discussion of the topics of the paper: https://helda.helsinki.fi/handle/10138/42272
For further publications, see: airilampinen.fi/publications
"Synthesizing prior work, this paper provides conceptual grounding for understanding the dialectic of challenges and opportunities that social network sites present to social life. With the help of the framework of interpersonal boundary regulation, this paper casts privacy as something people do, together, instead of depicting it as a characteristic or a possession. I illustrate interpersonal aspects of networked privacy by outlining four perspectives to ‘sharing’. These perspectives call for a rethink of networked privacy beyond an individual’s online endeavors."
Whole systems change across a neighbourhood
How can we collaborate with people to help them build their resilience? Get under the skin of the culture and the lives people live. Identify people’s feelings and experiences of community and understand what people think is shaped by different values and by the environment and infrastructure around them. The future of collaboration could bring many opportunities but people find it more difficult to live and act together than before. How can we help people…and communities build their resilience? Understand people’s different situations and capabilities to develop pathways that help them build resilient relationships. Help people experience and practice change together. Help people grow everyday practices into sustainable projects. Turn people’s everyday motivations into design principles. Support infrastructure that connects different cultures of collaboration. Build relationships with people designing in collaboration for the future…now.
This document by Eelke Wielinga describes the FAN (Free Actor Network) approach and practical tools to promote effective networks where traditional planning is balanced with the energies, incentives and dreams of the members. Mr Wielinga was one of the speakers of the Systemic M&E webinar (Innovations in Measuring Impacts in Market and Financial Systems: rethinking the current paradigm). This webinar was organised by SEEP's MaFI in October 2012 and hosted in collaboration with USAID's Microlinks and FHI360. To know more about the FAN approach and Eelke's work go to www.toolsfornetworkers.nl
There are many challenges to develop an online community of teachers. This paper describes the support needs of pre-service and early career teachers, and some design principles for creating online networks that meet them.
It includes a critique of existing online communities, including commercial sites (like Facebook) and government sites (like Scootle).
2. Public Care Center
By Bilal EzZo
Community Medical Center Healing Environments
Change Network
2
3. Community Medical Center Healing Environments
Assumptions
Network Maps Can help us see where we are Relationships as resilient and vulnerable
Network can help us plan Strategies for Change
• Behaviorism
• Cognitivist
• Humanism
• Constructivism
• Social constructivism
• Critical emancipatory
3
4. It is now recognized that to broaden our understanding about networks more qualitative and longitudinal
work is required that examines transformation and the change processes of networks; how they emerge
and develop over time. The case study reported here deals with these issues. It considers the development
of a network for new entrepreneurs first established by a local enterprise support public .
This forum provided a near ‘natural experiment’ to chart network emergence, change and evolution.
Employing participant observation, interviews and surveys, data were collected over .
This allowed the network to be mapped, and provided information about structural characteristics and in-
depth detail about network dynamics and change processes over time. Findings show how network
structure shifts from calculative to affective ties and demonstrate the importance of social ties for the
operation of a network and show how pattern & behavior change networking.
Social club to interest students in learning, while instilling a sense of pride, self-empowerment and social
responsibility.
Public community center project focused on site analysis, community development, research,
neighborhood revitalization, space planning, architecture, interior design, and client presentation.
sense of "interconnected group of people ,merging physical and virtual space.
Abstract
4
5. Introduction
The social networks is one factor determining the flow of information within communities and as such
may be important in determining successful implementation of community based management.
We mapped the social network used for communication of knowledge and information related to
natural resource extraction . further identified subgroups and examined their interrelations while
measuring to what extent personal attributes such as occupation can explain observed group structure.
Finally, it is compared the local ecological knowledge held of different occupations with the structure
of the communication network to map how well this structure can explain distribution of ecological
knowledge them. Results show that communication occurs primarily between fishermen who use the
same gear type, which may inhibit exchange of ecological knowledge within the community.
This may partly explain why the community has been unsuccessful in regulating resource extraction,
especially since potentially influential groups of no fishermen have a limited communication with the
various fisher groups. Analysis of network structure also shows that groups most central, and hence
potentially most influential, are dominated in numbers by migrant deep sea fishermen, hypothetically
less motivated to initiate collective action for resource management.
Hence, we conclude that a lack of collective action to remedy an unsustainable situation may be
attributed to various different but distinct aspects of the specific structure of the social network.
5
6. What is meaning Network ?
A supportive system of sharing information and services among individuals and groups having a common interest: Working
mothers in the community use networking to help themselves
manage successfully.
6
7. characterized by friendly companionship or relations: a social club.
connected with, or fashionable society: a social event.
living or disposed to live in companionship with others or in a community
, People are social beings.
What is meaning social ?
Who is public ?
Hearing people
Hard hearing people
Deafness people
Blind people
Handicap people
Mute people
Children
Adult
Teenager
Senior
Arab & Foreign
Tourisms
7
8. Then there are the more general questions of how online and offline behaviors differs
and how these tests vary across cultures. These are things that want to study in the
future.
8
9. • Connect people
• Provide a shared context
• Enable dialogue
• Stimulate learning
• Capture and diffuse existing knowledge
• Introduce collaborative processes
• Help people organize
• Generate new knowledge
Communities of practice are important because they:
9
10. Successful and sustainable communities have focused, well-
defined purposes that are directlyDevelop Relationships
Learn and Develop
Practice
Carry out Takes And
Projects
Create New
Knowledge
10
11. A lot of positive individual, community, environmental and economic outcomes. Some of these outcomes
include:
• Helps individuals fulfill their potential
• Creates meaningful jobs
• Economic equality
• Social inclusion
• Creates economic resiliency
• Enhances local economy
• Keeps decision making local
• Community revitalization
• Environmental stewardship
• Neighborhoods transform into stable and attractive places to live, work and play
11
12. Knowledge Sharing
Enable Grow up Building with situation
• Information
• Act
• Innovate
• Invent
• Awareness
• New Developments
12
13. 13
Problematic justified
Due to the development of technology and the progress, it is undergoing are getting more and more involved and
taken by the services technology effect, a fact that caused the lack of Communication between them people are focusing
on how to get update with the technology rather than finding some time to meet others and they can show how pattern
& behavior change their networking. They are forgetting the essence of life, which is enjoying life with others and by
that we are not restricted to normal people but we extend to those with disabilities. The Disabled are being lately
neglected by the society for the interest in stuff, they believe are of great importance relationship their life. And that’s
where the public care center idea came from the purpose behind creating such a center is to strengthen the
communication that was lost between people, especially between them and disabled or handicaps and deaf ones. And
they have Different their culture and character but they are not common their life ,it is would be education and teach &
learn in public care center in the side use location in Beirut near downtown. Its goal is to allow the people to get
introduced to these disabilities which would help them overcome their problem and communicate with the outside
world and they will behave and change networking such as Structures and striges and sharing & Merging and connecting
& relationship . Another purpose we are aiming at is to make a face to face (awareness) interaction between them in
order to undergo a process of change and cooperation their real life, which would lately have a positive feedback from
people and a positive effect on both, normal and disabled, because every person has a disability, if not physical, it would
be mental but putting these disabilities together. A positive result would obtain.
16. Community
Common Opportunities
Problem
Professional or personal (Ego)
Add value through collaboration
learning teaching Community of practice And Social Network
Knowledge-Centric
Structured
People-Centric (Self-Organizing )
+ =
Analysis
16
17. Member Role and Responsibility
Community Members
• Share
• Performing
• Supporting
Community Leader Stimulates Activity
• Maintaining
• Coordinates
• Liaises
Sponsor
• Promotes
• Strategic
• Resources
• Validation
17
18. Building a Community
Building has Five Steps for social network cube
Key Success
1. Common Interests
Members
Roles and Responsibilities
2. Build the Group
Build the Identity
18
19. • Activities
• Ground rules
• Charter
• Movements
• Central
• Diagonal
Add Value Commitments Tools Go-Ahead
• Communicate
• Official events
• Schedule-belonging
3. Define the working Mode
4. Find Resources
5. Officially Launch the Community
19
20. Ying Yang
Problematic
Essence vs. Appearance
• Individual
• Ego Network
• Support
• Affective
• Affiliations
• Dynamic and complex
• Bigger
• structure
• random
• Non random
• Developed
• Process
• Relation
Point line plan volume
Concept & Problematic
20
21. Emotion Non-Emotion
Character’s Sociality
1. Eyes
2. Ear
3. Mouth
4. Smile
5. Hand
6. Nose
7. Smell
Five senesce
watch Blind
Talk Mute
Touch No Feeling
(Individual)Alone
Hear Deaf
Smell No life
The competition focused on envisioning the future of higher education learning environments. connectivity through
both on-line and on-site settings. Teams had less than two weeks to investigate the critical design
issues, Communities of practice are dynamic social structures that require “cultivation” so that they can emerge and
grow.
21
22. “Our goal is the development-quality, sustainable healing environment that clearly improves
patient outcomes and affirms the trust of beneficiaries served.”
Nature
As Environment
Eco(Individual)
As I
Problematic
As Handicaps
Special Cases Private
As Deaf
Freedom
As People
Safe
As Army
22
29. create buildings that strengthen the fabric of
which they become a part, strive for design
excellence, and demonstrate environmental
stewardship.
29
32. A modern house designed is filled with
texture and pattern. The mostly neutral
residence is brought to life through design
elements, building materials and furnishings
which are equally as tactile as they are visually
stimulating. Rich grained woods, patterned
natural stone and sleek metal combine with
dramatic textured textiles to create a dynamic
living space.
A map of the local area provided the basis for
the floor pattern, which continues up the walls
in the form of a shelving system. Segments
corresponding to parks on the map are
elevated from the floor, acting as units for
displaying merchandise. The spiral staircase
connects the shop to the editorial office at the
same time as the street level entrance gives
visitors to the office a welcoming first
impression.
32
41. 41
Studio
news
PLAN (3nd floor)
entrance
Media office
wc Meeting
room Kitchen net
elevator
Media
communication
Wc &
storage
Media
office
Out
entrance
Staff
room
Department special private for community with public center , it is opening space
with public in this site building .
• Community Networking center
Studio
TV
PRESS
57. 57
Cube House is named after the orthogonal and Cubist forms that dominate the exterior. In
addition to the external visual experience home these volumes is pervasive in the interior /
floor cube to cube floor. The luxury of this home is expressed through a simple and above all
functional disposition of the game volume and glass surfaces justifies the concept of the
object. Made ground and upper floors was achieved by air, or gallery space. Through this
space is designed to communicate with the environment of the building and upper floors
because the air due to the connection point of view and the light transmitted to the living
room floor common area.