Thursday, September 18, 2008

Wikis: Why should you use them in your classroom?

There are several really good reasons why teachers should engage their students with Web 2.0 technologies, and among others, wikis.

In an excellent article called Using and creating knowledge with new technologies: a case for students-as-designers published in the March 2006 issue of Learning, Media and Technology, Kay Kimber and Claire Wyatt-Smith gives the following reasons:

1. Students are sophisticated users of technologies outside of school. Many students have access to technologies that are more powerful and sophisticated than the technologies they use in school. To address this issue, teachers have to be able to use more sophisticated and powerful technology tools IN school. The danger is that students will find schoolwork less challenging and interesting than their activities outside of school.

2. Another point to remember is that students predominantly use their powerful and sophisticated technologies for social communication. Thus, teachers have to be instrumental in ensuring that their students develop into critical, creative users of new technologies. To do this, teachers have to equip their students with tools and resources to argue, analyze, evaluate, interpret, and persuade. In other words, teachers have to help their students develop their capacities to build their knowledge and critically engage with material through the use of technology.

3. Now to the practical pedagogy: Establishing a community of learners is one of the best ways to engage students in the learning process. A learning community with shared experiences fosters a sense of belonging, the building of shared values, escalating intellectual engagement with material (being willing to tackle more difficult and more complex issues), and a safe place to build identity. You can read more about communities of learners in Edutopia.

4. Wikis are the most accessible venue for showing evolution of thought on any given subject discussed on a wiki. Most wikis have a HISTORY section that keeps track of different versions of the pages. Students and teachers can follow the increase in knowledge and sophistication of thought through this versioning capability.

5. Wikis make very good e-portfolios with ample opportunity for collection of intellectual products and reflection on those products.

6. Wikis are great venues for collaboration, based on the idea that our collective knowledge is more than the individual knowledge of each of us.

7. Wikis can help develop critical thinking skills - evaluating information, considering how to improve information, and producing collaborative thinking.

8. Wikis fit the emphasis on constructivist learning where people are producers, not just consumers of knowledge. According to Vygotsky, Piaget and Dewey, learning is a social activity.

8. Wikis are easy to use.
Wikis are free.
Wikis are dynamic content.


Resources:
Educause has a good 2 page booklet on 7 Things You Need To Know About Wikis.
Brian Housand and Kristina Ayers has a wiki on wikis: The Wonderful World of Wikis.

Thursday, September 04, 2008

Wikis: What are they?

Today I am starting a short series of blog entries on Wikis. I am planning 4 entries:

1. What are they?
2. Why should you be using them in your classroom?
3. How do you get started?
4. Ideas for using a wiki in the classroom.

Wikis are websites that allows visitors to participate in creating and editing the content. Usually, wikis are set up so that anyone can be a website designer without knowledge of specialized software and specialized knowledge (like knowing html). It is a perfect tool for collaboration, a way of sharing creative processes and products between many participants.

The word "wiki" is a Hawaiian language and it means "quick" or "fast."

For a quick wiki look at wiki's, watch this video from my favorite how-to website Commoncraft



People use wikis for many collaborative projects. The best known is probably Wikipedia, the collaborative encyclopedia, where, by the way, I have contributed citations for an article. Another great wiki for teachers is Curriki, a collaborative curriculum site where you can find lesson plans, teaching ideas and resources from all over the world.

I went searching wiki websites and found the following:
- ambientweather - "
a community for sharing information and openly discussing products" offered for sale by related websites - a built in review space for their products.
- Made in China - a website offering electronics for sale.
- VAMworld - a website dedicated to Morgan and Peace dollars and all the varieties of dies (coin printings) available. A great resource for collectors of this kind of coin.
- Recipes Wiki - a vibrant site with more than 48,000 articles, and over 100 recipes for guacamole!
- Australia Travel Wiki - a website travellers to Australia put together.
- FamilySearchWiki - website with huge amounts of information on how to research and construct a family history.
- International Music Score Library Project - A website dedicated to keeping a virtual library of public domain music scores. To date it has a collection of more than 20,000 scores for 11,000 works, and 1,200 composers (information from Wikipedia).
- Using Wiki in Education - a wiki book must read for those interested in a scholarly exposition of the subject with lots of practical applications.
- ECU English 1200 service-learning - class wiki for a first-year research-writing course at East Carolina University.
- What we are trying to achieve - a student created history project website on women soldiers in the Revolutionary and Civil Wars. Check this one out. It is interesting.

As you can see, people use wikis for many different purposes. Some wikis are public - there for everyone to see and participate, others are protected (everyone can see it, but only members can contribute) and others are private, with only members allowed to see and contribute. One thing that is common to all of them, is that they allow collaboration and a gathering of corporate knowledge.

I know people say the fact that everyone can contribute makes the information on a wiki suspect. But don't you think the fact that so many people contribute also provides many eyes for checking accuracy and veracity?

For a history of the concept of Wiki, see the Wikipedia entry.
For a discussion of the value and dangers of Wikipedia, set aside about 20 minutes and watch this video by Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia Foundation on the birth and inner workings of Wikipedia.



Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Rwanda in May

Time to update you on my visit to Rwanda with my family. If I had to choose a country in Africa to live in it might very well be Rwanda. I used to say I'd love to live in Arusha, Tanzania, but I have to say Kigali, the capital of Rwanda comes close. There is an excitement in the city, with vibrant economic growth, relative stability in government, and some of the most beautiful scenery you can imagine.

Two things stand out from my time in Kigali: The visit Christelle and I paid to the Genocide Memorial, and the other a visit to Association Mwana Ukundwa.

The Genocide Memorial Center is a modern, interactive museum built on a site where 250,000 people killed in the genocide are buried, detailing the story of the Rwanda Genocide, as well as many other genocides in the history of the world. During about 100 days starting in April 1995 more than 1 million people were killed. We should remember that this mass killing did not happen by sending in armored vehicles or bombs, but it happened one by one, a slaughter of one person at a time by another person. The killings were not the worst part either. Millions more were displaced, systematically maimed, women and girls of all ages intentionally raped and tortured.

The scars are often still visible on people. I met a gentleman who carried a scar as big as my hand on the side of his head where a machete took away the skin and flesh from his skull. Another young lady told me she was adopted by her current family, because she lost every single member of her immediate and extended family. You can read some of the heartrending stories on the Genocide Memorial Center website. Even as I sit here writing about it, I am close to tears as I remember the pain and the strength of those survivors.

The greatest tragedy is that it could have been prevented if the world had paid attention. If you can stomach it, here is a video telling just a little about the impact of that 100 days. If you want to read more about this genocide, you may search the Memorial Center website, or read a fairly accurate account (from what I understand of the situation) in Wikipedia.





The thing that amazed me more than anything else was the deep reconciliation that has taken place and the fervent desire of Rwandese to never allow this level of hate to take over their society again. President Kagame is credited with policies that encourage reconciliation, political stability and economic growth.


A point to ponder was that even after all the times we have said "we will not let it happen again," the roots of genocide is clearly visible in other parts of the world. The UN published a report in 2005 detailing the atrocities committed in Darfur, but said that it could not be called a genocide since the intent did not appear to be "a specific intent to annihilate, in whole or in part, a group distinguished on racial, ethnic, national or religious grounds." This seems to be an issue of technical definition of a term only, since the crimes committed against people in that region are atrocious: 400,000 people killed and 2.5 million people displaced. You can read more about this terrible situation at DarfurScores.org.

Why all of this you ask? If we do not educate our gifted children to be concerned for others and to do what they can to prevent crimes against people groups, genocide will happen again. You can find out more about the topic at Genocide.org.

No, onto the next highpoint of our visit, and one with much more positive energy:

Association Mwana Ukundwa, or "Beloved Child Association", was founded by Mrs Mukankaka Rose, shortly after the 1994 Genocide in Rwanda. Mrs. Rose is one of the most impressive people I have had the privilege to meet in my life - a woman of great compassion and entrepreneurial spirit.


During the genocide, Mrs. Rose made a promise to God that if He protected her family she would spend her life doing what He wanted her to do. None of her family perished and she started by gathering 40 orphans and finding foster families for them. She also found support for those families. Today her organization employ 19 people and they provide a range of services: Education, Vocational, HIV/AIDS, Micro Enterprise, and Evangelism. You can read of their accomplishments here. Association Mwana Ukundwa is recognized by the Rwandese government as a non profit organization.

This photograph shows some young ladies using sewing machines to make school uniforms for the children under the care of the Beloved Child Association.

If you are looking for a project that your students can adopt, this is a worthwhile endeavor.