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Wikis in the Classroom

A wiki is a type of website that allows visitors themselves to easily add, remove and otherwise edit and change some available content, sometimes without the need for registration.
Wikipedia

Ward Cunningham created the first wiki in 1995. The name "Wiki" was inspired by the Hawaiian word wiki or wiki-wiki, which means "quick".

Wikipedia is probably the most well known example of a public wiki. Many wikis are private: existing on intranets or behind firewalls with access restricted to registered users. [See Wiki Vandalism]


Key Characteristics
A wiki allows users to:
  • edit pages from within a browser window
  • use a simplified markup language
  • instantly modify pages

Generally each page in a wiki has three representations:

  1. the html code page
  2. the webpage which is created from the html code and is viewed in a browser window
  3. the user-editable source code page, from which the server produces the html page

The user-editable source code page is edited using a simplified language commonly called wiki markup language. Pages written using wiki markup language are usually referred to as wikitext.

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Creating and Editing Wiki Pages
There is no accepted standard wikitext language. The grammar, structure, features and keywords used depend on the particular software used on the wiki site.
  • How to edit a page on Wikipedia
    Contains advice on editing Wikipedia pages as well as an introduction to wikitext language.
  • WetPaint Sandbox
    Experiment with wikitext language by editing an existing sandbox wiki page or create your own sandbox to play in.
  • Wikispaces
    Wikispaces uses these text markup rules.
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Wiki Farms
A "wiki farm" is a server or a collection of servers that provides wiki hosting, or a group of wikis hosted on such servers.

Wikipedia

Wiki farms are particularly useful for teachers who want to use a wiki but lack the technical expertise or support required to host their own wiki.
  • Wikispaces
    This site offers educators free K-12 Plus wikis.
  • Peanut Butter Wiki
    Allows you to make a free wiki site in 30 seconds. It's as easy as making a peanut butter sandwich.
  • JotSpot
    Create and share documents, calendars, spreadsheets and more.

For comprehensive lists of Wiki Farms check the Open Directory Project list of Wiki Farms or the Wikipedia article on Wiki Farms.

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Educational Value of Wikis
Wikis encourage group social interaction and collaboration and support asynchronous communication allowing users to contribute at a time, and from a place that suits them. Many students find that their learning is most effective when they are actively involved in the construction of their knowledge.

The following articles explore the Educational Value of Wikis.

  • Using Wiki in Education
    The Science of Spectroscopy wiki includes information about and examples of some educational uses for wikis.
  • Teaching and learning online with wikis.
    Augar, N., Raitman, R. & Zhou, W. (2004). Beyond the comfort zone: Proceedings of the 21st ASCILITE Conference.
    This paper presents wikis as a useful tool for facilitating online education. Basic wiki functionality is outlined and different wikis are reviewed to highlight the features that make them a valuable technology for teaching and learning online.
  • Building Collaborative Capacities in Learners: The M/Cyclopedia Project, Revisited.
    Dr Axel Bruns, Sal Humphries. Queensland University of Technology
    This paper explores the four key characteristics of a 'produsage' environment and identifies four strategic capacities that need to be developed in learners to be effective 'produsers' (user-producers).
  • Wide Open Spaces: Wikis Ready or Not
    Brian Lamb, Educause September/October 2004
    A practical introduction to using wikis for teaching.
  • My Brilliant Failure: Wikis in the Classroom
    This Kairosnews blog entry by Heather James highlights the importance of wiki users having control of the construction of the wiki.
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Classroom and Teacher Applications
These sites demonstrate how teachers and their students are using wikis to enhance teaching and learning.
  • Terry the Tennis Ball
    This Wiki is bought to you be the students of Grade 3-4 at Bellaire Primary School in Geelong, Victoria, Australia. It is the adventures of a tennis ball called Terry. Our teacher, Mr Pearce, started the story on the 29th of April 2006 and we have been adding to it since.
  • Grade5M Wiki
    We are situated at Yarra Road Primary School, in Croydon, Victoria, Australia.
  • Wiki as a Tool for Web-based Collaborative Story Telling in Primary School: A Case Study
    Alain Désilets ,Sébastien Paquet. National Research Council of Canada
    This paper presents a case study where primary level students (Grade 4-6) used a Wiki for collaborative storytelling. The paper reports observations on the collaborative process that took place during the activity. It also describes the activity in sufficient detail to allow a technically sophisticated teacher to use it in the classroom, and makes recommendations on how Wiki could be improved to better support collaborative storytelling by young children.
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Wiki Vandalism
Wiki vandalism is generally defined as editing a wiki in a way that is intentionally disruptive or destructive. There are four generally acknowledged types of vandalism:

  • deletion of legitimate information,
  • insertion of nonsense or irrelevant content,
  • addition of unwanted commercial links (spam)
  • policy violations specific to that wiki.

Most public wikis do not require registration which means that anyone with a web browser can edit the wiki. Responses to vandalism vary from wiki to wiki, but most vandals are blocked by username or IP address when it becomes clear they are being deliberately destructive.

Although large and more controversial wikis are more prone to vandalism than less well frequented wiki sites, these larger sites usually have an extensive active group of users who monitor and maintain the wiki content.

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Wikis As Information Sources
Can the information on a wiki be trusted? Although a number of articles discuss the reliability of Wikipedia as an information source it would be incorrect to assume that other wikis are therefore reliable sources of information.

Students should be encouraged to look for authoritative sources to back up research with verifiable content, statistics and definitions. [See Evaluating Web Sites]

  • Internet Encyclopedias Go Head to Head
    Nature 438, 900-901 [15 December 2005]
    A Nature investigation finds Jimmy Wales' Wikipedia comes close to Britannica in terms of the accuracy of its science entries.
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