This article or chapter is incomplete and its contents need further attention.
Some information may be missing or may be wrong, spelling and grammar may have to be improved, use your judgment!
Web 2.0 is one of those "buzz words" like DHTML that do not have a clear meaning but does refer to a trend or practise that does favor new technologies.
“Web 2.0 was really about upgrading the "front-end" and user-experience of the Web. Much of the innovation taking place today is about starting to upgrade the "backend" of the Web and I think that will be the focus of Web 3.0 (the front-end will probably not be that different from Web 2.0, but the underlying technologies will advance significantly enabling new capabilities and features).” ([1], retrieved 14:22, 27 April 2007 (MEST))
Nova Spivak in his timeline of the past, present and future of the Web describes evolution of the web in terms of two variables: information connections and social connections, i.e. information links vs. people links plus.
Nova Spivack & Radar Networks Towards a WebOS
The idea being that information and social connections gain from more sophisticate tools and some sort of emerging intelligence as in social software that gain be summarized as tools + services + aggregation)^scale (Lee Bryant, Becta review 2007).
What is common about these example is that “behind the
success of the giants born in the Web 1.0 era who have survived to
lead the Web 2.0 era appears to be this, that they have embraced the
power of the web to harness collective intelligence” (O'Reilly,
2005), in other words Web 2.0 is strongly related to
social computing and collective intelligence (the "wisdom of
the crowd").
In addition, Web 2.0 is related to enhanced user experience and
webservices standards and APIs that allow for more collaboration
between machines (data exchange is usually XML-based).
Tim O'Reilly's meme map (dated 2005) illustrates important concepts, some of which we explore in all related articles.
Jared Spool [2] points out
the power of APIs: A very good example is Google Maps that allows anyone to overlay data onto any place that Google Maps can show. E.g. here is the place where these very words have been written.
See AJAX for the most popular technology used, but rich internet applications can be based on many other technical
frameworks.
A few years ago, there was a lot of talk about the semantic web. This didn't happen so far ;). So more and more it appears that Web 2.0 means actually going back to the roots of academic Internet in the 80' and very early 90' which was all about communication and exchange. Internet/Web is also (and has been most of the time) about being easy, open and flexible.
Web believe that web 2.0 in education refers to very different sort of practice:
Web 2.0 as platform, i.e. it allows learners teachers to access all sorts of applications that can't be found on school computers. That includes various "productivity software" (writing, drawing, image manipulation, concept maps, etc.), but also specialized services like LMSs.
Web 2.0 as social platform, i.e. using various services to organize collaborative work that extends beyound a single classroom
Web 2.0 as collaborative platform, i.e. using services to organize collaborative or collective classwork. A good example are wikis.
Spool, Jared M., Web 2.0: The Power Behind the Hype, HTML
Graham Attwell, Director, Pontydysgu, Web 2.0 and the changing ways we are using computers for learning: what are the implications for pedagogy and curriculum? PDF
Michael Thomas (eds.), Handbook of Research on Web 2.0 and Second Language, Idea Group Inc (IGI), ISBN 1605661902.
Strampel, K. & Oliver, R. (2010). They think they are learning, but are they? Strategies for implementing Web 2.0 to positively impact student learning. In C.H. Steel, M.J. Keppell, P. Gerbic & S. Housego (Eds.),Curriculum, technology & transformation for an unknown future. Proceedings ascilite Sydney 2010 (pp.924-935).http://ascilite.org.au/conferences/sydney10/procs/Strampel