Hi Gina!
I know i'm late in the thread, and it seems you have a sound plan, but just
in case you're still putting your slides together, allow me to share this:
The Mythbuster section in particular might be aligned with some of the
things you are trying to explain.
Best Regards,
Vahid.
On Mon, Mar 26, 2018 at 10:24 PM, Jackie Koerner <jackie.koerner(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
Gina,
Love this!!! I am so excited for you and the people who come to your
session. Do let us know how it goes!
Best,
Jackie
--
Jackie Koerner, Ph.D.
Researcher & Visiting Scholar
jackiekoerner.com
On Mar 26, 2018, at 9:49 PM, Gina Bennett
<bennett.gina(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
hello again, Wikipedia Education participants
First, let me thank all of you who have contributed such great ideas,
resource links, & offers of help with my upcoming presentation about
Wikipedia for Adult Educators. Your suggestions have helped me a LOT & I
am
feeling much more confident about moving forward
with this presentation.
So far, I've put together a rough schedule of my 1.5 hour
workshop/presentation. I've included it below, & you'll notice that I've
incorporated suggestions from a number of you in my planning:
To start (~ first 5 mins.): Introduction of the workshop & the presenter
(me), as well as a short explanation of my perspective, about the
incident
which made me so passionate about access to
knowledge & why I became
interested in WP.
next 10 mins: What you *thought* you knew about Wikipedia: a short
interactive quiz to expose some of the myths people may still believe
about
WP (I can post my quiz to anyone in this mailing
list who is interested)
15 mins: Intro to WP. I am thinking I might just use Pen-Yuan Hsing's
Vimeo
presentation (
https://vimeo.com/234993156)
because it says what I want
to
say & because it is just SO excellent (I will
be sure to attribute you,
Pen-Yuan!)
15 mins.: Action item 1: Case Study.
I would like to assign a popular topic in Adult Education which has
recently seen some controversy (e.g. Multiple intelligences). Most
participants will have a laptop or tablet so they can work in small
groups
to look up this term. Note how a quick search
using Google (or even
Google
Scholar) yields a wealth of explanatory or how-to
resources. BUT - when
you
look this up in WP, you very quickly see that
this concept has come under
debate (important to know this!!!) We can examine the anatomy of a WP
article (article page, Talk page, History) to see how knowledge about the
topic evolves & is presented, reviewed, and negotiated; how we can form a
more nuanced view. We can also talk about how WP works to provide
knowledge depth and integrity, with internal links, external links,
related
articles, portals, categories, discussion pages.
15 - 25 mins.: Action item 2: So what?? We could do this part in small
groups or back in the large group, depending on how things are flowing. I
might start off the discussion like this: Our Adult Education programs
are
designed to help our students transition, with
confidence, into the next
stage of their learning journey: whether university/college programming,
a
technical program, a trade, or just more
strongly-informed participation
as
citizens, parents, community members etc. Some
questions to get/keep the
discussion going:
- In this world of Facebook, "fake news", tabloids, and super-easy
access to all kinds of information, what would you like your students
to
understand about knowledge?
- Knowing what you know now about how knowledge is constructed,
debated,
negotiated, reviewed etc. in WP, how you might
use this in your
practice?
- How do your students currently use WP? Or --
how do you suspect they
are using WP? How could they be using it more effectively? How can you
use
this as an opportunity to talk about where
knowledge comes from & how
to be
critical about the information they read?
In the last half-hour (if time & interest permit): let's try editing! I'm
thinking of creating a page in my WP sandbox for our professional
association, & getting everybody to help us produce at least a stub
article. Participants can create a WP account if they like (& will be
encouraged to do so!!) or just contribute references & text that we can
put
together to make a stub. Would be really exciting
if we could make this
live & -- who knows -- maybe some people will even add to it after the
workshop.
As always, I am open to more of your thoughts & suggestions.
Appreciatively
Gina Bennett
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--
Vahid Masrour
Community Capacity Manager, Wikipedia Education Program
vmasrour(a)wikimedia.org