Knowledge Management @ KTH/SU, Sweden – 6 unofficial course promos

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Alternative location: www.facebook.com ©opyright Andrei Neculau andreineculau.com Count 6 conceptual promos Purpose: Promote the course Course: Knowledge Management Location: DSV KTH/SU, Kista/Stockholm, Sweden Date: February 2009
Help answer the question about Knowledge Management
What are the 9 knowledge areas in Project Management?
This is going to be on the final exam in my Project Management course. I somehow LOST the bit of homework that this information was contained in. I REALLY don't want to call my professor because a) I don't want him to know i lost my homework, & b) I can't stand the man. So, if anyone happens to know the 9 knowledge areas of Project Management, that would help me a lot!
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Someone needs to spend time with the assigned reading homework.
Use your mind. Think. Push those gray cells to communicate and share their thoughts with each other to form new ones. Or choose to be mediocre; the latter course will put you in a very large group.
Ask your tutor for help. I am sure they would prefer it if you went to them because you do not understand rather than not attempt it at all.
Sorry it is way above me, but good luck
There's some really good articles on management at http://management.hammocksurvivalguide.com/
I don't know if it will solve your issues but there's some good stuff there.
It is an interesting speciality, sort of a cross between a business degree and a library degree. The upside is that it will prepare you very specifically for a certain niche in an organizational hierarchy. The downside is that it might not give you enough big-picture training to move up that hierarchy. But like most undergraduates degrees what you do with it depends mostly on you, not on the degree.
Good luck.
Data are mixed up.
Before attempting to address the question of knowledge management, it's probably appropriate to develop some perspective regarding this stuff called knowledge, which there seems to be such a desire to manage, really is. Consider this observation made by Neil Fleming
A collection of data is not information.
A collection of information is not knowledge.
A collection of knowledge is not wisdom.
A collection of wisdom is not truth.
The idea is that information, knowledge, and wisdom are more than simply collections. Rather, the whole represents more than the sum of its parts and has a synergy of its own.
in summary the following associations can reasonably be made:
Information relates to description, definition, or perspective (what, who, when, where).
Knowledge comprises strategy, practice, method, or approach (how).
Wisdom embodies principle, insight, moral, or archetype (why).
The value of Knowledge Management relates directly to the effectiveness with which the managed knowledge enables the members of the organization to deal with today's situations and effectively envision and create their future. Without on-demand access to managed knowledge, every situation is addressed based on what the individual or group brings to the situation with them. With on-demand access to managed knowledge, every situation is addressed with the sum total of everything anyone in the organization has ever learned about a situation of a similar nature. Which approach would you perceive would make a more effective organization?
No, it is not needed. Companies survived for hundreds of years without it.
Try ibm.com for statistics.