This Course
|
Wikipedia Resources
|
Connect
Questions? Ask us:
contact |
![]() | This course page is an automatically-updated version of the main course page at dashboard.wikiedu.org. Please do not edit this page directly; any changes will be overwritten the next time the main course page gets updated. |
This course will help you learn skills that help you to advocate effectively for change in direct patient care, within health care organizations, and in the wider political infrastructure. Policy changes can dramatically shift health care and public health outcomes: examples include the passage of the Affordable Care Act, tobacco control, motor vehicle safety, occupational safety, lead poisoning prevention, funding for prevention and control of infectious diseases, and preparedness and response for epidemics and terrorism. These changes and others decreased the age-adjusted death rate in the US from 881.9 per 100,000 in 1999 to 731.9 per 100,000 in 2013.
The first step is to choose a policy topic.
Each group should choose a different topic; topics are available to groups in the course on a first-come, first-served basis. Once you have chosen your topic, please enter it on
the course spreadsheet and the dashboard so that others will not edit the same page.
Important: Some topics, such as vaccines, are considered to be “high risk” for bad-faith editing, and attempted edits to Wikipedia pages on these topics may be locked to limit the need for cleanup. Members of your group should check the talk page of any page that may be viewed as risky in advance to ensure that any edits you make will be accepted and uploaded in time to complete the assignment. If you would like to edit one of these topics, you may need to consult directly with the editor in advance. You can also choose to edit a different, unlocked topic/page.
Once your group has your topic selected, each member of your group should assign themselves your topic in the My Articles section of the Home tab of this course page. You can review all the topics other groups and students have picked by visiting the Students tab of this course page.
Intertwine is a platform where you you will be chatting with student editors enrolled in other Wiki Education courses. This week, the featured activities include:
Sign up for a session here. If you haven’t logged in using your Wikipedia account, you will first be redirected to Wikipedia logging page. After logging in using your Wikipedia credentials, you will be able to sign up for our activity.
What kinds of edits are appropriate? The kinds of page edits you should make will depend on the stated needs of the editor on the talk page. Typically editors will ask for additional detail on certain topics, more references, and revision of language to be objective. In the past, students have turned stubs into short articles, turned short articles into long articles, and added one or more sections to longer articles.
Adding several paragraphs of well-referenced content that express a neutral point of view will always be an appropriate edit for this assignment. However edits that do nothing more than change the language of an article to be more neutral, without adding content or references, are not sufficient for this assignment. Other modifications may be appropriate if they are specifically requested by the editor: if in doubt, please post to the course page for clarification.
Each member of the group should be responsible for some portion of the edits; the individual account will be linked to each edit and will show who has made every change and update. When you're done with your group work elect one group member to copy and paste the information you've composed into a Word or Google Doc and upload that to the Forum in the CLE under Week 5. This is how your peers will be able to access and review your content using track changes and/or comments.
Resources
Optional resources
Intertwine is a platform where you you will be chatting with student editors enrolled in other Wiki Education courses. This week, the featured activities include:
Sign up for a session here. If you haven’t logged in using your Wikipedia account, you will first be redirected to Wikipedia logging page. After logging in using your Wikipedia credentials, you will be able to sign up for our activity.
The components of this week's assignments will take place in the course CLE.
https://courses.ucsf.edu/course/view.php?id=3908
Last week, you & your group completed a first draft of the “Wikipedia” assignment. This week, you will peer review your classmates’ assignments, and next week, you & your group will revise your own assignment to reflect the feedback you have received.
You must return your comments (on your peers' Wikipedia entries) to your peers by this Saturday, 9/23 in order to receive credit.
Please consider both the editor's goals and focus on their edits along with Wikipedia's principles and manual of style. The group editing the Wikipedia page should provide guidance to you by nothing the goals and focus of the edits, and which sections of the article they prioritized. Your reviews should justify your scoring and provide suggestions for improvement.
Directions for peer review
Late completion of the peer reviews will result in a 20% reduction in grades every 24 hours. Your peer review will be assessed using the grading rubric in the CLE.
Using the comments of your peer reviewers, revise your draft, then move your work to the article on Wikipedia.
Resource
In addition to moving your content to the actual article (from the sandbox) each student (each member of the group) must copy and create a file of those final edits to attach to the assignment submission link in the CLE (so that you can be graded using the rubric you've found there).
Intertwine is a platform where you you will be chatting with student editors enrolled in other Wiki Education courses. This week, the featured activities include:
Sign up for a session here. If you haven’t logged in using your Wikipedia account, you will first be redirected to Wikipedia logging page. After logging in using your Wikipedia credentials, you will be able to sign up for our activity.
This Course
|
Wikipedia Resources
|
Connect
Questions? Ask us:
contact |
![]() | This course page is an automatically-updated version of the main course page at dashboard.wikiedu.org. Please do not edit this page directly; any changes will be overwritten the next time the main course page gets updated. |
This course will help you learn skills that help you to advocate effectively for change in direct patient care, within health care organizations, and in the wider political infrastructure. Policy changes can dramatically shift health care and public health outcomes: examples include the passage of the Affordable Care Act, tobacco control, motor vehicle safety, occupational safety, lead poisoning prevention, funding for prevention and control of infectious diseases, and preparedness and response for epidemics and terrorism. These changes and others decreased the age-adjusted death rate in the US from 881.9 per 100,000 in 1999 to 731.9 per 100,000 in 2013.
The first step is to choose a policy topic.
Each group should choose a different topic; topics are available to groups in the course on a first-come, first-served basis. Once you have chosen your topic, please enter it on
the course spreadsheet and the dashboard so that others will not edit the same page.
Important: Some topics, such as vaccines, are considered to be “high risk” for bad-faith editing, and attempted edits to Wikipedia pages on these topics may be locked to limit the need for cleanup. Members of your group should check the talk page of any page that may be viewed as risky in advance to ensure that any edits you make will be accepted and uploaded in time to complete the assignment. If you would like to edit one of these topics, you may need to consult directly with the editor in advance. You can also choose to edit a different, unlocked topic/page.
Once your group has your topic selected, each member of your group should assign themselves your topic in the My Articles section of the Home tab of this course page. You can review all the topics other groups and students have picked by visiting the Students tab of this course page.
Intertwine is a platform where you you will be chatting with student editors enrolled in other Wiki Education courses. This week, the featured activities include:
Sign up for a session here. If you haven’t logged in using your Wikipedia account, you will first be redirected to Wikipedia logging page. After logging in using your Wikipedia credentials, you will be able to sign up for our activity.
What kinds of edits are appropriate? The kinds of page edits you should make will depend on the stated needs of the editor on the talk page. Typically editors will ask for additional detail on certain topics, more references, and revision of language to be objective. In the past, students have turned stubs into short articles, turned short articles into long articles, and added one or more sections to longer articles.
Adding several paragraphs of well-referenced content that express a neutral point of view will always be an appropriate edit for this assignment. However edits that do nothing more than change the language of an article to be more neutral, without adding content or references, are not sufficient for this assignment. Other modifications may be appropriate if they are specifically requested by the editor: if in doubt, please post to the course page for clarification.
Each member of the group should be responsible for some portion of the edits; the individual account will be linked to each edit and will show who has made every change and update. When you're done with your group work elect one group member to copy and paste the information you've composed into a Word or Google Doc and upload that to the Forum in the CLE under Week 5. This is how your peers will be able to access and review your content using track changes and/or comments.
Resources
Optional resources
Intertwine is a platform where you you will be chatting with student editors enrolled in other Wiki Education courses. This week, the featured activities include:
Sign up for a session here. If you haven’t logged in using your Wikipedia account, you will first be redirected to Wikipedia logging page. After logging in using your Wikipedia credentials, you will be able to sign up for our activity.
The components of this week's assignments will take place in the course CLE.
https://courses.ucsf.edu/course/view.php?id=3908
Last week, you & your group completed a first draft of the “Wikipedia” assignment. This week, you will peer review your classmates’ assignments, and next week, you & your group will revise your own assignment to reflect the feedback you have received.
You must return your comments (on your peers' Wikipedia entries) to your peers by this Saturday, 9/23 in order to receive credit.
Please consider both the editor's goals and focus on their edits along with Wikipedia's principles and manual of style. The group editing the Wikipedia page should provide guidance to you by nothing the goals and focus of the edits, and which sections of the article they prioritized. Your reviews should justify your scoring and provide suggestions for improvement.
Directions for peer review
Late completion of the peer reviews will result in a 20% reduction in grades every 24 hours. Your peer review will be assessed using the grading rubric in the CLE.
Using the comments of your peer reviewers, revise your draft, then move your work to the article on Wikipedia.
Resource
In addition to moving your content to the actual article (from the sandbox) each student (each member of the group) must copy and create a file of those final edits to attach to the assignment submission link in the CLE (so that you can be graded using the rubric you've found there).
Intertwine is a platform where you you will be chatting with student editors enrolled in other Wiki Education courses. This week, the featured activities include:
Sign up for a session here. If you haven’t logged in using your Wikipedia account, you will first be redirected to Wikipedia logging page. After logging in using your Wikipedia credentials, you will be able to sign up for our activity.