The document discusses the evolution from Learning 1.0 to Learning 2.0 driven by increased user control of content, interconnectivity of applications, and ability to form communities and collaborate online. It provides examples of how social media technologies like podcasting, blogs, video on demand, photo sharing, virtual worlds, social bookmarking, wikis and social networking can be used to support learning and training in educational contexts. It warns that adopting these approaches requires organizations to think like networks rather than groups and embrace openness, diversity and autonomy rather than focus and privacy.