Wikiversity
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Screenshot of wikiversity.org home page
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Web address | www |
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Slogan | "set learning free" |
Commercial? | No |
Type of site
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Educational, self study |
Registration | Optional |
Available in | Multilingual |
Owner | Wikimedia Foundation |
Created by | Wikimedia community |
Launched | August 15, 2006 |
Alexa rank
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26,220 (January 2016[update])[1] |
Wikiversity is a Wikimedia Foundation project[2][3] that supports learning communities, their learning materials, and resulting activities. It differs from more structured projects such as Wikipedia in that it instead offers a series of tutorials, or courses, for the fostering of learning, rather than formal content.
History
Wikiversity's beta phase officially began on August 15, 2006, with the English language Wikiversity.
The idea of Wikiversity began with the initial development of the Wikiversity community within the Wikibooks project, however when it was nominated for deletion from Wikibooks, soon there was a proposal to make Wikiversity an independent Wikimedia project,[4] with the fundamental goal to broaden the scope of activities within the Wikimedia community to include additional types of learning resources in addition to textbooks.
Two proposals were made. The first project proposal was not approved (2005) and the second, modified proposal, was approved (2006).[5]
The launch of Wikiversity was announced at Wikimania 2006 as:
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.... the idea here is to also host learning communities, so people who are actually trying to learn, actually have a place to come and interact and help each other figure out how to learn things. We're also going to be hosting and fostering research into how these kinds of things can be used more effectively.[6]
— Wikimania, 2006
Project details
Wikiversity is a center for the creation of and use of free learning materials, and the provision of learning activities. Wikiversity is one of many wikis used in educational contexts,[7] as well as many initiatives that are creating free and open educational resources.
The primary priorities and goals for Wikiversity are to:
- Create and host a range of free-content, multilingual learning materials/resources, for all age groups in all languages.
- Host scholarly/learning projects and communities that support these materials.[8]
The Wikiversity e-Learning model places emphasis on "learning groups" and "learning by doing". Wikiversity's motto and slogan is "set learning free",[9][10] indicating that groups/communities of Wikiversity participants will engage in learning projects. Learning is facilitated through collaboration on projects that are detailed, outlined, summarized or results reported by editing Wikiversity pages. Wikiversity learning projects include collections of wiki webpages concerned with the exploration of a particular topic.[11] Wikiversity participants are encouraged to express their learning goals, and the Wikiversity community collaborates to develop learning activities and projects to accommodate those goals. The Wikiversity e-Learning activities give learners the opportunity to build knowledge. Students have to be language aware in order to be able to correct their classmates. By doing this, students develop their reflection skills. Secondly, they enable students to be autonomous deciding what to write or edit, also when and how to do it. Students are able to free resort to any mean of support. At the same time, it fosters the Cognitive development engaging students to collaborate between them. However, as the project is still in its early stages,[12][13] its learning model is still in development.
Learning resources are developed by an individual or groups, either on their own initiative, or as part of a learning project.[14] Wikiversity resources include teaching aids, lesson plans, curricula, links to off-site resources, course notes, example and problem sets, computer simulations, reading lists, and other as devised by participants – but do not include final polished textbooks. Texts useful to others are hosted at Wikibooks for update and maintenance.[15] Learning groups with interests in each subject area create a web of resources that form the basis of discussions and activities at Wikiversity. Learning resources can be used by educators outside of Wikiversity for their own purposes, under the terms of the GFDL and a Creative Commons license (like Wikipedia).
Languages
There are currently fifteen different Wikiversities - Arabic, Czech, English, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Slovene, Spanish, and Swedish; Wikiversity projects in other languages are being developed at the "beta" multilingual hub.
For newly established specific language Wikiversities to move out of the initial exploratory "beta" phase, the new Wikiversity community must establish policies governing research activities. Wikiversity may act as a repository of research carried out by the Wikimedia Research Network, or others who are involved in wiki-based, or other research. Wikiversity hosts original research in addition to secondary research, unless a specific language group decides upon no research. It is expected that researchers will respect and update guidelines for appropriate research through a community consensus process.[16][17] Currently the English Wikiversity hosts more than 376 research pages.[18]
See also
References
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- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. by Piotr Konieczny; International Journal of Instructional Technology and Distance Learning;January 2007, Vol. 4, No. 1.
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- ↑ Wikiversity learning projects portal, Wikiversity
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External links
Wikinews has related news: Wikimedia Netherlands 2007 conference held on wikis and education |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wikiversity. |
- http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://wikiversity.org Wikiversity annual activity
- http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://en.wikiversity.org English Wikiversity annual activity
- The Wikiversity multilingual portal – with links to all Wikiversity sites.
- The English language Wikiversity (in beta phase)
- "Resources for Professional Development"[dead link] Prepared for the Fall conference of the Missouri Juvenile Justice Association, October—2006, Office of State Courts Administrator, Division of Judicial Education P48.
- "Conference Review" by Peter Mulholland; Journal of Emergency Primary Health Care; Vol.4, Issue 4, 2006. (pdf version)
- Topps, D. "Sharing medical educational resources using free and open-source software." in 7th Annual WONCA Rural Health Conference – Transforming Rural Practice Through Education. 2006. Seattle, WA, USA.
- "Access to Global Learning: A Matter of Will" by Steven R. Van Hook; Education Resources Information Center; (ERIC Document No. ED492804); April 27, 2006.
- "Using Wiki to Promote Collaborative Learning in Statistics Education" by Dani Ben-Zvi; Technology Innovations in Statistics Education; Volume 1, Issue 1, 2007, Article 4; Page 4. (pdf version)
- "Bootstrapping a Semantic Wiki Application for Learning Mathematics" by Claus Zinn.
- "Beyond Difference: Reconfiguring Education for the User-Led Age" by Axel Bruns; Proceedings ICE 3: Ideas, Cyberspace, Education.
- "The Challenges and Successes of Wikibookian Experts and Wikibook Novices: Classroom and Community Collaborative Experiences" by Suthiporn Sajjapanroj, Curt Bonk, Mimi Lee and Meng-Fen Grace Lin.
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- "New-Media Art Education and Its Discontents" by Trebor Scholz.
- "Wikiversity; or education meets the free culture movement: An ethnographic investigation" by Norm Friesen, Janet Hopkins.
- Wikiversity (beta)
- Articles containing potentially dated statements from January 2016
- Commons category link is defined as the pagename
- Articles with dead external links from October 2012
- Alternative education
- Educational technology projects
- Virtual learning environments
- Wikimedia projects
- Online education
- Multilingual websites
- Internet properties established in 2006
- Educational websites