A wiki is a collaborative website and authoring tool that allows users to easily add, remove and edit content. Wikipedia, the online open-community encyclopedia, is the largest and most well known of these knowledge sharing tools. The popularity of these tools is exploding.
Some of the benefits that make the use of wikis so attractive are:
Discovery Exercises:
Use these resources to learn more about wikis.
Wikis can be made for any classroom!
Some of the benefits that make the use of wikis so attractive are:
- Anyone (registered or unregistered, if unrestricted) can add, edit, or delete content.
- Tracking tools within wikis allow you to easily keep up on what been changed and by whom.
- Earlier versions of a page can be rolled back and viewed when needed.
- Users do not need to know HTML in order to apply styles to text or add and edit content. In most cases simple syntax structure is used.
Discovery Exercises:
- For this discovery exercise, you are asked to take a look at some school and library wikis and blog about your findings. Here are a few examples to get you started:
Educational Wikis
Book Lovers Wiki - developed by the Princeton Public Library..
Sample school wiki
Sample Literary Circle Wiki (10th Grade English)
Sample AP World History Wiki
pbwiki for educators - Create a blog post about your findings. What did you find interesting? What types of applications within libraries and schools might work well with a wiki?
Use these resources to learn more about wikis.
- Wikis in Plain English
- Wiki, wiki, wiki - from the Core Competency blog of the Public Library of Charlotte-Mecklenburg County
- Wikis: A Beginner’s Look – an excellent short slide presentation that offers a short introduction and examples.
- 10 Best Practices for using wikis in education
- Wiki in a K-12 Classroom
Wikis can be made for any classroom!
- Idea #1: Collaborative note-taking. Everyone pitches in and adds a fact or two about a topic. Teachers can encourage students to include opinions, challenges, and appropriate criticism. Students would then write essays using only these notes. Make sure that each addition includes a citation to website, book, or database, including page numbers so that it can be checked.
- Idea #2: History. Students can compile a wiki of famous artists, architects, writers, and other key historical figures from a city, state, or country.
- Idea #3: Create a "top 10" lists and supporting material. This could include scientists and their discoveries, top writers and their books, ... you get the idea.
- Idea #4: Mission trading cards (see Week 3), once completed, could be added to a class wiki.
So what's in a wiki? Find out by doing some exploring on your own.
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