SSWC: A Truly Authentic Audience: Student Editing and Writing on Wikipedia
editDate | April 6, 2018 |
---|---|
Time | 3:00-4:45 pm PT |
City, State | Savannah, Georgia |
Presentation details
editEric Grunwald, Lecturer, English Language Studies, MIT
Student Success in Writing Conference
Savannah, GA, April 6, 2018
egrunwal@mit.edu
Overview
editWikipedia, now in its 17th year, remains an online space where accuracy, neutrality, and fair representation matters. Empowering a diverse group of editors (including students!) to contribute to Wikipedia (the largest collaborative writing project in history!) is one way to ensure that high quality information is freely available to all.
This afternoon's session will introduce participants to becoming Wikipedia editors to cultivating a greater understanding of how to create classroom assignments on Wikipedia that will engage and empower writing students while reinforcing core writing and communication skills.
Participant list
editPlease add your Wikipedia username below. If you do not have one, you may later simply go to en.wikipedia.org and create one. TIP: Don't use your real name, as the rare person my flame you. (I'm WritingMan.)
Click "edit source." Add the # sign (to continue numbering.)
Then, create your signature by typing four tildes (~) in a row and clicking "Save changes."
We are NOT in a post-fact world
editAlso, learn more about verifiability on Wikipedia
Articles written or edited students
editUndergraduate:
The International Entrepreneur Rule
Graduate:
FAQ
editHow reliable is Wikipedia?
- Check out Accuracy of content
Who edits Wikipedia?
- Check out Wikipedia#Community
Also worth knowing about
Thinking like a Wikipedian
editBasic guidelines, communication customs, editing customs
The focus here is on developing your "Wikipedia hat," so you can read and evaluate Wikipedia articles based on Wikipedia's standards, not those from your own areas of expertise. (n.b.: Modified from exercise created by User:AmandaRR123)
Read over the following Wikipedia policy/guideline pages, and then use what you've learned to evaluate one of the articles listed.
(Hint: Read "nutshells" and intros most carefully, then skim the rest of each policy/guideline page. That will give you the sense you need.)
- Wikipedia:The five pillars of Wikipedia
- Wikipedia:The perfect article
- Wikipedia:Identifying reliable sources
- Wikipedia:Neutral point of view
- Wikipedia:Be bold
- Wikipedia:Your first article
- Wikipedia:What Wikipedia is not
- Wikipedia:Manual of Style
Articles to evaluate: pick one, and use your new "Wikipedia hat" to evaluate them. How might they be improved?
Rating and Communicating on Wikipedia
- What Class Labels mean (Featured Article, C-Class, Start-Class, etc.): Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Assessment
- Wikipedia:The perfect article
- Wikipedia:Talk page guidelines
Some options for making your first edit
editCitation Hunt: A tool from Wikimedia Foundation Labs to help where [[citation needed]]
WikiGrabber: Another tool to help find where [[citation needed]]
Training to edit Wikipedia
edit- Cheatsheet
- Wikipedia:Featured Articles
- Wikipedia:Policies and guidelines
- Help:Getting started
- Wikipedia:Starting an article
Affiliates of WikiProject Women |
---|
African women |
Architecture & design |
Art |
Business |
Feminism |
Health |
Hip hop music |
History |
History Month (March) |
Jewish women |
Journalism |
Music |
Religion |
Scientists |
Sport |
Warfare & military |
Writers |
Missing articles department: Women in Red |
Article improvement department: Women in Green |
See also: Gender gap task force |
Going forward: some resources to help you determine what and how to contribute
edit- WikiProject
- What Class Labels mean (Featured Article, C-Class, Start-Class, etc.): Wikipedia:Version 1.0 Editorial Team/Assessment
- Portals on wikipedia
- Requested articles
- Missing articles
- Wikipedia:Stubs
- Wikipedia:Most-wanted articles
- Wikipedia:Translating
- Wikipedia:Red links
- Wikipedia:Women in Red
Good Digital Citizenship and Activism in Wikipedia: Underrepresented Groups and Topics
editwritten by User:AmandaRR123, February 2016
Problem: Wikipedia is a globally distributed network where judgement of quality is not based around contributor expertise, but rather work according to the standards of the project itself -- the most legible unit of work is a good citation. As one of the oldest communities on the Internet, Wikipedia gives students to a chance to practice good digital citizenship: use their critical thinking skills to discover community values, norms and styles of communication, and contribute in a way that will make sense to other community members.
However, Wikipedia can, like many other communities, have a bias towards the status quo. Therefore, those working on issues related to underrepresented groups can expect to be accused of activism, bias, an agenda, as if those things do not already exist on Wikipedia
Digital citizenship is doubly important to those working on issues related to underrepresented groups: one must know how to communicate effectively using community standards to convince the Wikipedian community that changes in the status quo does not automatically equal violating policy, and that you are still partners in the same goal of wanting to improve the encyclopedia.
Resources we can draw from
edit- Google News
- Google Books
- Google Scholar Note! You can synchronize Google Scholar with your institution's library. Check it out!
- Better Googling: MIT Libraries Google search tips