Week of 11/12 June 2013 (Class #5)


Week 5: A deeper dive into Open Educational Resources

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This week we will hear from more experts in Wikipedia and open educational resources, for a panel discussion exploring how Wikipedia's coverage of this topic can be improved. Our guests will include Elitre, a longtime member of the Wikimedia movement from Bologna, Italy. Elitre has worked with cultural institutions to donate their holdings to Wikipedia under a free license, and supports readers and new contributors mainly on the Italian language Wikipedia. Other speakers will be

Discussion and Q/A will follow the panel's comments. Please bring any questions or ideas prompted by your work on your final project!

Please note: We expect a lively session, and plan to keep our focus on our guests' presentations this week. If you have questions or ideas about your final project that are not related to OER, this week especially, we recommend that you use our class discussion page and/or our lab session; we will not have much time to take general questions before the panel discussion in class this week.

Lab session

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Join us informally Thursday evening/Friday morning (same time as class time, 1:00am UTC) to work through the on-wiki homework tasks or ask other editing questions. In addition to the conference room, you can always use our class discussion page for questions and comments: WT:WIKISOO.

Week 5 Homework

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Do:

  • This is the last week to work on the final project for this course, as outlined in Week 3. Having either selected an existing Wikipedia article to improve at least one level on the quality scale, OR started a new Wikipedia article (which you will aim to bring to at least "Start" class in quality), you should by now have this well underway. Not so much? No worries. Work on it this week, joining us in the lab if you're stuck. Also bring any questions, concerns, or ideas up on our course talk page! We will be reviewing selected articles in the last class.
  • How many edits (changes) have you accumulated on Wikipedia? Check out your user contributions page to find out. By now it should be nearing at least 200. If not, don't worry -- you're getting there, and you're welcome to apply for the badge after the course's conclusion if you need extra time!
  • Write a blog post about your experiences working on Wikipedia (or similar: a YouTube video, a series of tweets or Facebook posts, a Storify or Tumblr page…) Use the hashtag #wikisoo (and, if appropriate, #CommOER). Post about it on the course talk page!

Week 5 Extra Credit

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Choose from one or more of the following, if you haven't done so already:

Do:

  • Seek an assessment of your article. This could be from a WikiProject, through a formal peer review process (WP:GA, WP:FA, WP:PR). It's also a good idea to seek input from classmates, but we do not suggest that class participants assign article quality ranks on one another's articles.
  • Participate in a decision on Wikipedia (e.g. a peer review discussion, an article deletion or merge debate, etc.)
  • Discuss one or more of Wikipedia's policies with a colleague, student, or friend.
  • Help a newbie figure something out (yes, you are ready!)
  • Improve the lead section of an article (in addition to your main assignment).
  • Perform a Good Article review for another Wikipedian.
  • Leave a WikiLove message or a Barn Starfor a fellow Wikipedian.
    Writing Wikipedia Articles: The Basics and Beyond (WIKISOO)  
Past courses: MarchMayAugust 2013
February 2014 • February 2017