4 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2018
    1. A frequently used rule to describe participation in online communities is the 90-9-1 rule. This rule posits that approximately 90% of the members consume content, 9% participate to some extent by contributing content from time to time, and 1% contribute a lot and regularly (Nielsen, 2006).

      A frequently used rule to describe participation in online communities is the 90-9-1 rule. This rule posits that approximately 90% of the members consume content, 9% participate to some extent by contributing content from time to time, and 1% contribute a lot and regularly (Nielsen, 2006).

    1. According to Steven Clift (n.d.), to many peoples, e-democracy suggests greater and more active citizen participation enabled by the Internet, mobile communications, and other technologies in today’s representative democracy as well as through more participatory or direct forms of citizen involvement in addressing public challenges.

      Perhaps e-democracy is the same as digital citizenship?

    1. The educational system transforms into a time catcher where students, during a determinate number of daily hours, live in an analog parallel world.

      I love how this article talks about the paradoxes and attempts to distinguish between these to present a more nuanced view of digital citizenship.