Folks,
From Resource Shelf
http://www.resourceshelf.com/2010/03/25/at-university-of-denver-journalism-…
College students know the online resource of which they dare not speak:
Wikipedia, the voluminous internet encyclopedia demonized by many in higher
education—and a resource that two University of Denver instructors use as a
centerpiece of their curriculum.
Denver journalism students are writing Wikipedia entries as part of a
curriculum that stresses online writing and content creation as readers move
to the web en masse.
Journalism instructors Lynn Schofield Clark and Christof Demont-Heinrich
said students are told to check their sourcing carefully, just as they would
for an assignment at a local newspaper.
[Snip]
Students in the university’s Media, Film, and Journalism Studies Department
have composed 24 Wikipedia articles this year, covering everything from the
gold standard to San Juan Mountains to bimettalism, an antiquated monetary
standard.
Demont-Heinrich said the Wikipedia entries didn’t require old-school shoe
leather reporting—because the online encyclopedia bars the use of original
quotes—but they taught students how to thoroughly research a topic* before
publishing to a site viewed by more than 68 million people a month…
* We wonder if the University of Denver library, librarians, and library
resources were part of the training?
Sorry if someone has already posted this.
--
Keith Old
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