Wikipedia in universities and colleges?

Here at JISC we are lucky enough to have a view across the education sectors in teaching, learning and research. I’m delighted to be at the EduWiki Conference this week, which is run by the Wikimedia UK Foundation and brings together educators to discuss how they use Wikipedia in their teaching and Wikipedians who create and edit the content.

I intend to give a view across the sector, pulling together changes in research and in teaching from our colleagues in the field, and showing how the ‘“Wikipedia” way’ supports those emerging trends in practice.  For example, JISC has already been involved in improving Wikipedia entries by getting academics and Wikipedians together – as you can see from this blog post by my colleague Sarah Fahmy.

C21st_Scholarship_and_Wikipedia title=
easel.ly

Martin Poulter, who is organising the conference, told me: “This is the first Eduwiki conference and hopefully the first of many.  We see immense mutual benefits in working with educators and academics and really welcome the involvement of the Jisc community.”
I’m keen to widen the circle, too.  Some key questions that we’re looking at to help lead institutions through the changing scholarly process include:

How can students and researchers make best use of Wikipedia?  And importantly, how do they verify and cite their reading?
What’s different about the way people approach the scholarship on Wikipedia?
How can universities and colleges use that platform to raise the profile of their work?
How does the Wikipedia approach to openness impact on the way people are doing their research and reading online?

I’d welcome your thoughts.

 

2 comments

  1. Brian Kelly

    Hi Amber
    Many thanks for this post – it’s great to see such rapid summary, I guess posted just a few hours after the Eduwiki conference finished.
    I know some people don’t value infograohics or such posters which attempt to provide a high level overview of future trends – but I’m a fan!
    As you know I am a strong supporter of academic blogging and an open notebook approach to research – the ‘many eyes’ approach which can help to inform the development of research ideas and identify flaws, false assumptions, etc. at an early stage.
    I think it would be fascinating to take each of the various items and statements you’ve made in the infographic and explore what they mean in more detail. How do you intend to progress the various ideas which were discussed at the conference?

  2. Bash Bosh Blogging

    Hello Amber,

    Thanks for this informational post. A very good presentation indeed. I also think that you should upload a bigger image for this infograph – its kinda blurry and all us with a bad vision cant see the important thing in it :)

    http://blogging.bashbosh.com

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