From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Meetup/Boston/Educating with Wikipedia
When and Where
Time10am to 2pm
AddressBoston University Hillel House, Bay State Road Room, 213 Bay State Road
City, StateBoston, Massachusetts
DateFebruary 23, 2018

Educating with Wikipedia Information

Join the Boston Library Consortium for an "Educating with Wikipedia" workshop.

How many times have you heard “don’t use Wikipedia"? Recent research suggests that Wikipedia-based assignments are more valuable for learning about the reliability of online sources, the class topic, and writing for a general audience, as well as developing information literacy, critical thinking, and technical skills. This session will introduce the research, illustrate best practices, and engage participants in revising their assignments to include Wikipedia-based components.

Facilitators will begin by presenting information on learning with Wikipedia, and then engage participants in active discussion and workshopping of assignments, incorporating learnings from the research to improve their pedagogy.

Participants will learn how and why teaching with Wikipedia is helpful for developing critical thinking and information literacy skills. This will lead to discussions and engagement on incorporating Wikipedia assignments into their classroom, and participants will leave with a plan of action to help incorporate Wikipedia into a variety of STEM courses.

Register by Friday, February 12, 2018

Event Information

Before the Event

Please sign up for a Wikipedia account in advance. We can only create a limited number of Wikipedia accounts from the same IP address at one time, so to be safe, come to the event with a Wikipedia account. For more information, check out the Wikipedia tutorial about how to register.

Directions

  • The event will be held at the Boston University Hillel House, which is easily accessible by public transportation. The Hillel House is on the corner of Granby Street and Bay State Road. Once you arrive, take the elevator up to the third floor. Signs will direct you to the Bay State Road Room.
  • Public Transit: MBTA Green line (B train) to Boston University East
  • Parking: Limited metered street parking on Bay State Road, BU public parking lots (paid)

Internet Access

  • Connect to the BU Guest network; then you'll be prompted to request a guest account. To receive your guest wireless access information, you will need to access your email on a device that is already connected to the Internet or receive SMS text messages on a mobile device. Instructions are available online.
  • If you have an eduroam account, you can connect to the eduroam network instead.

Event Schedule

Schedule
Time Title Speaker
10-10:15 1. Introduction All
10:15-10:30 2. Why are we talking about Wikipedia? Zach McDowell
10:30-10:45 3. What is Wikipedia? Phoebe Ayers
10:45-11:00 4. Why Wikipedia needs Education Amanda Rust
11-11:30 5. What Wikipedia does for Education Amy Carleton
11:30-12:00 6. Summary of research into Wikipedia and information literacy Zach McDowell
12-12:45 7. Lunch
12:45-1:15 8. What Libraries do/can do for Wikipedia Greta Kuriger Suiter, Phoebe Ayers, Anna Newman, Amanda Rust
1:15-1:45 9. Breakout and discussion: How can you apply this to your work?
1:45-2 10. Wrap-up Zach McDowell

Presenters

Phoebe Ayers served four years on the Board of Trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia and its sister projects. She is the co-author of a book about Wikipedia, and is a long-time member of the project's community.

Amy Carleton teaches with Wikipedia and studies communication and collaboration in online communities. She is a lecturer in Comparative Media Studies/Writing at MIT.

Zachary McDowell was previously a research fellow at the Wiki Education Foundation, studying student learning outcomes and digital literacy using Wikipedia. He has been teaching with Wikipedia since 2011.

Anna Newman was previously the Open Access Specialist at Boston University, where she organized Wikipedia editing events to promote open access to knowledge.

​Amanda Rust has held offices in a national forum for literature librarians, and presented or written on topics like information literacy and instruction, Drupal and website design, post-custodial theatre archives, library special collections and Wikipedia, inclusive information systems design, and digital humanities pedagogy.

​Greta Kuriger Suiter has presented on various ways of teaching with Wikipedia at conferences and events across the country including the 10th Annual Conference of African American Librarians and the Conference on College Composition and Communication this year.

Additional Resources

Tutorials

Instructional Tools

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Meetup/Boston/Educating with Wikipedia
When and Where
Time10am to 2pm
AddressBoston University Hillel House, Bay State Road Room, 213 Bay State Road
City, StateBoston, Massachusetts
DateFebruary 23, 2018

Educating with Wikipedia Information

Join the Boston Library Consortium for an "Educating with Wikipedia" workshop.

How many times have you heard “don’t use Wikipedia"? Recent research suggests that Wikipedia-based assignments are more valuable for learning about the reliability of online sources, the class topic, and writing for a general audience, as well as developing information literacy, critical thinking, and technical skills. This session will introduce the research, illustrate best practices, and engage participants in revising their assignments to include Wikipedia-based components.

Facilitators will begin by presenting information on learning with Wikipedia, and then engage participants in active discussion and workshopping of assignments, incorporating learnings from the research to improve their pedagogy.

Participants will learn how and why teaching with Wikipedia is helpful for developing critical thinking and information literacy skills. This will lead to discussions and engagement on incorporating Wikipedia assignments into their classroom, and participants will leave with a plan of action to help incorporate Wikipedia into a variety of STEM courses.

Register by Friday, February 12, 2018

Event Information

Before the Event

Please sign up for a Wikipedia account in advance. We can only create a limited number of Wikipedia accounts from the same IP address at one time, so to be safe, come to the event with a Wikipedia account. For more information, check out the Wikipedia tutorial about how to register.

Directions

  • The event will be held at the Boston University Hillel House, which is easily accessible by public transportation. The Hillel House is on the corner of Granby Street and Bay State Road. Once you arrive, take the elevator up to the third floor. Signs will direct you to the Bay State Road Room.
  • Public Transit: MBTA Green line (B train) to Boston University East
  • Parking: Limited metered street parking on Bay State Road, BU public parking lots (paid)

Internet Access

  • Connect to the BU Guest network; then you'll be prompted to request a guest account. To receive your guest wireless access information, you will need to access your email on a device that is already connected to the Internet or receive SMS text messages on a mobile device. Instructions are available online.
  • If you have an eduroam account, you can connect to the eduroam network instead.

Event Schedule

Schedule
Time Title Speaker
10-10:15 1. Introduction All
10:15-10:30 2. Why are we talking about Wikipedia? Zach McDowell
10:30-10:45 3. What is Wikipedia? Phoebe Ayers
10:45-11:00 4. Why Wikipedia needs Education Amanda Rust
11-11:30 5. What Wikipedia does for Education Amy Carleton
11:30-12:00 6. Summary of research into Wikipedia and information literacy Zach McDowell
12-12:45 7. Lunch
12:45-1:15 8. What Libraries do/can do for Wikipedia Greta Kuriger Suiter, Phoebe Ayers, Anna Newman, Amanda Rust
1:15-1:45 9. Breakout and discussion: How can you apply this to your work?
1:45-2 10. Wrap-up Zach McDowell

Presenters

Phoebe Ayers served four years on the Board of Trustees of the Wikimedia Foundation, which runs Wikipedia and its sister projects. She is the co-author of a book about Wikipedia, and is a long-time member of the project's community.

Amy Carleton teaches with Wikipedia and studies communication and collaboration in online communities. She is a lecturer in Comparative Media Studies/Writing at MIT.

Zachary McDowell was previously a research fellow at the Wiki Education Foundation, studying student learning outcomes and digital literacy using Wikipedia. He has been teaching with Wikipedia since 2011.

Anna Newman was previously the Open Access Specialist at Boston University, where she organized Wikipedia editing events to promote open access to knowledge.

​Amanda Rust has held offices in a national forum for literature librarians, and presented or written on topics like information literacy and instruction, Drupal and website design, post-custodial theatre archives, library special collections and Wikipedia, inclusive information systems design, and digital humanities pedagogy.

​Greta Kuriger Suiter has presented on various ways of teaching with Wikipedia at conferences and events across the country including the 10th Annual Conference of African American Librarians and the Conference on College Composition and Communication this year.

Additional Resources

Tutorials

Instructional Tools


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