Classroom Teacher

Eduwikis: Create a Wikispace for your Classroom or School

This post is a work-in-progress as we experiment with using wikis in the classroom and school environment.

What is a wiki?

Activate your prior knowledge by thinking about wikipedia which is a a public encyclopedia that anyone can edit. Just like a regular encyclopedia, people can visit wikipedia to search for information.

However, unlike a traditional encyclopedia, the reader can also fix a mistake and add to the content of the encyclopedia. In short, wikipedia is a dynamic and living piece of information because readers are actively editing and updating the content as the world changes.

A wiki is a webpage that (permitted) members can collectively add to or change.

Why use a wiki in the classroom?

How to start an educational wiki for your classroom:

Visit http://www.wikispaces.com/site/for/teachers. Educational wikis get the “private” version of wikispace for free (vs $50 per month)

Things to know about Using Wikis in the Classroom

Things to think about as we experiment with wikis in the classroom.

Plus

  1. You can bulk create accounts for students by emailing it to the wikispace help desk.(http://www.wikispaces.com/help+teachers#accounts)
  2. Students can work on the same pages at the same time (but different sections) because Wikispace has an automatic merging feature that can merge changes without interrupting the authors.
  3. You have a complete history of edits (and who makes the edits) which helps you in terms of assessment as well as keeping cyber-vandalism to a minimum.

Minus

  1. Student accounts can receive internal wikispace mail from other accounts. I imagine this would be from anyone in the wikispace system. (Apparently there’s a way to go in and turn off the messages option for each account, but you’d have to upgrade to the private label version to turn off messaging. Even if you go in and turn this feature off, students will be able to go in and turn it back on.)
  2. I think regular member accounts (i.e. students) will be able to add / remove other members and change the public / protected / private settings of the wikispace, although this may be a temporary bug. This seems wrong, but my member account seems to be able to invite other people, although the invitation didn’t actually let me gain access to the private wikispace. Can anyone else comment about this?

Interesting / Issues

  1. Student privacy and online security. Think about it.
  2. The service is provided for free because if your school / board gets hooked, you’ll need to upgrade to their enterprise model called private label where you can have site-wide administration. (i.e. turn off the messaging features for the entire board.)
  3. Wikis can be used to power your school website. Check out this example: http://arborheights.wikispaces.com/
  4. If you wanted to give parents access, you could either 1. keep it as a private wiki and create a parent account. (You could probably get away with one parent account, but then if a parent or student accidentally deleted some information, you couldn’t track it down to the individual. You’d still be able to undo the damage with the change logs.) or 2. make it a protected wiki which means the entire world could read the wiki, but not edit it. (You’d have to make sure to use pseudonyms and keep personally identifiable information out of the wiki.)
  5. Non-members can’t leave comments on the wiki, so even if you had a publically readable, protected wiki, you couldn’t have a student from the other side of the world leave a comment like you could with a blog.
  6. You don’t have as many customizable features as you would with a self-hosted blog, although this is on par with what you can do with a free WordPress or Edublogs account.
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