Wikis in Higher Education - Ideas
Welcome! Please feel free to add your thoughts and ideas about how to use wikis in higher education.
Faculty Use
- Faculty write lots of grants and usually have to collaborate with others. Wikis make it easy to collaborate and minimize amount of time spent trying to negotiate f2f meeting times. Simply create a private wiki, start pages for each section of grant and get busy writing. With the discussion feature and the revision history feature, it's easy to see who added what and to continue working asynchronously throught the entire process. (Although I would recommend an initial f2f meeting for brainstorming the grant, showing folks how to use the wiki, deciding on how to organize the wiki site, etc.)
- idea 2
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Student Use
- A group writing project as an assignment can be quite daunting. Students find it as difficult to find meeting times as faculty do and they really need some way to be able to work together easily. Normally, group projects would be a series of revised word documents and lots and lots of email back and forth to see who has latest revision, who wrote what, etc. Or, it would mean learning how to use track changes feature. With a wiki, you can easily do everything all in one place.
- idea 2
- etc
Comments (2)
tektrekker said
at 7:28 am on Jul 3, 2007
Comment features are nice: they can provide opportunities for people to interact with your page even if they can't or don't want to edit the page, they can help in planning process for projects, etc. This comment feature only has 2000 characters which is not a lot of commenting. I've used up about 320 characters in this comment.
bethany said
at 9:00 am on Jul 3, 2007
If you are using Safari on a Mac, you don't have nearly the robust wysiwyg editing features as you would in Firefox.
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