Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Wiki: Collaborative Authorship Made Easy

This summer, I’m exploring a variety of Web sites and tools that you can use in the classroom and/or for your own professional development. Each week, I’ll talk about how it works, point out related sites, and discuss classroom connections. This week, I focus on using wikis for collaborative authorship in the classroom.

Most teachers with Internet access know at least one wiki: Wikipedia. Love it or hate it, most of us know that it’s out there. I like Wikipedia and what it brings to the classroom, but it’s not for everyone. Wikis can be however because they offer the opportunity for students to create collaborative texts in ways that pen and paper never have. Not even Microsoft Word can provide the collaborative authoring tools that a wiki can.

First, let me define wiki a bit. A wiki is a collection of extensively linked web pages, stored in a database, that is collaboratively written. Depending upon how the wiki is set up, anyone might be able to edit it, or changes may be limited to a specific group of writers. You can set up free wikis on sites like pbwiki, seedwiki, wetpaint, and wikispaces. For a more detailed explanation of wikis, see How Wikis Work from How Stuff Works or the Wikipedia definition of Wiki.

Back to the idea of collaboration. The Commoncraft Show (whose video on RSS I used a few weeks ago) explains how the collaborative authorship works in the context of a group of friends planning a camping trip in this video (a transcript is also available):



The benefits for collaborative writing should be obvious. Wikis allow multiple authors to edit a text easily. While the video doesn’t discuss it, wikis include tracking information so anyone can look at who makes changes to the texts and compare the different versions at different points in its creation. Try to do that with a collaborative paper written in Word.

Wikis give teachers an easy way to look at how drafts evolve and to determine the participation of various group members on a document. Check out Wiki: Collaborative Editing in Education for additional explanations and suggestions for scaffolding student collaboration, such as assigning roles to group members just as you would for literature circles.

Collaborative authorship is just the beginning of what you can teach with wikis. You can learn more about how other teachers are using wikis across the content areas and curriculum by tapping these sites:

Wikis and Blogs in Education

Identifying Best Practices for Student Wikipedia Projects

Wetpaint’s Wikis in Education

When Wikipedia Is the Assignment

Wiki in a K-12 classroom

One more thing...
No discussion of wikis would be complete without at least a few words on Wikipedia. The open, collaborative authorship of Wikipedia leads many educators to avoid using it. Because the details on the site do not seem to have the same validation system used by sources like the Encyclopedia Britannica. Robert French outlines the arguments typically used against integrating Wikipedia with the classroom library.

I prefer to turn those arguments on their head. Why not talk about how what we know about the world change over time, depending on a variety of factors such as our perspectives, our access to details, and our ways of thinking? The Truth According To Wikipedia by Netherlands public television provides an in-depth exploration of how an evolving Wikipedia entry demonstrates first-hand that knowledge is socially constructed. You can explore this issue in the classroom simply by looking at the history of an entry and discussing how it has changed over time.

From discussions of how information is published on Wikipedia, you shift to 21st century research skills. As I mentioned in this week’s ideas, what matter to research today isn’t that students must be given the most reliable sources. It’s that they know how to evaluate any texts they encounter so that they can choose the most reliable sources themselves. In other words, students should be allowed to learn how to evaluate entries on Wikipedia and choose for themselves.

5 comments:

Tammy Gillmore said...

Thanks for these posts...very informative! I really appreciate all the links/examples/resources to which you refer us. This is a great time for such a series...while teachers have more time to "play"! I've been sharing your entries with friends and peers. Thanks again!

Anonymous said...

For more than two years I have been working to open the wiki-window for teachers, promoting the use of Wikipedia as means to teach Critical Literacy. I fully agree with your closing comments in The Truth About Wikipedia (Feb. 27, 2007); we can't teach kids how to evaluate and interpret texts that are off limits...ooohhh, censored. Hopefully, your blogs will peak educators' interest in wikis as learning supports and teaching tools. If more teachers experience the positive effects of wikis on student engagement and learning, we can dispell some of the negative feelings out there!

Robert said...

I agree with the concept of teaching students how to evaluate the content they find online. This is why I stated, in my post, "For instance, if a student turns in a paper with a Wikipedia reference, I require that they provide two or three independent resources to verify the Wikipedia reference."

To put it simply, I teach students to verify (find supporting documents for) anything they find online. Actually, the same concept holds true for any text - printed or virtual.

The problems with Wikipedia go deeper than just getting the "facts" straight. I won't go into them here. Suffice to say, Wikipedia can be used for a good vetting exercise, provided that supporting references (the more, the better) are found. Still, we haven't even begun to discuss what makes a good reference.

In conclusion, and only in the context of Wikipedia as a single reference unsupported source, I believe that as a 'sole' reference, Wikipedia is useless for educators and students. IMO.

Even Britannica can be wrong, but - they have their own transparent vetting process. When/if Wikipedia develops one, then we may reconsider the site as a reliable source.

make_literature said...

The common problem with wiki sites is the luck of project management implemented.

There are few good, dedicated collaborative writing sites that more or less successfully handles this issue. I suggest this one:

Collaborative Writing Community

It may be good ideas for a next post:)

Event Tents Dubai said...

Hopkins is wonderful too, but my memories of his poetry are all tied up with my love for the college professor who first made me realize that I wanted to be an English major, Alison Sulloway. She was a Hopkins scholar, and her passion for the poetry was contagious. It wasn't so much that I have ever loved Hopkins that much. I just wanted to learn to care about words and images and sounds that much. Great collection of resources! Thanks!Branding Event Tents Dubai | Catering Hall Tents Dubai | Commercial Promotion Tents Dubai | Corporate Event Tents | Event tents Rentals Dubai | Events in Dubai | Events Tents Supplier Dubai | Exhibition Booth Tents Dubai | Exhibition Tents in Dubai | Fashion Show Tents in Dubai | Fashion Shows Event Tents Dubai | Product Launches Event Tents | Religous Event Tents Dubai | Tent Companies in Sharjah | Tent Manufacturers in UAE | Tent Rental Sharjah | Tents for Sale in Dubai | Wedding Tents Dubai | Party Marquee Tent Rental Dubai UAE | Event Marquee Tent Rental Dubai UAE | Wedding Marquee Tent Rental Dubai UAE | Outdoor Marquee Tent Rental Dubai UAE | Temporary Marquee Tent Rental Dubai UAE | Ramadan Marquee Tent Rental Dubai UAE Mine is certainly pocket sized and perfect in other ways as well. I'm going to carry "Keeping Things Whole" by Mark Strand. My ELA classes have done most of these suggestions but they still don't care to participate in poetry. Using technology doesn't help either. Any other ideas?