 Questions from last week?  Topic requests for Week 6?  Final Exam: › Will be posted by 12:00pm on Monday › To be handed in or posted (depending on.

Slides:



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Presentation transcript:

 Questions from last week?  Topic requests for Week 6?  Final Exam: › Will be posted by 12:00pm on Monday › To be handed in or posted (depending on preferred method) by the last class

 What is a wiki? › According to Wikipedia ( : “A wiki ( / ˈ w ɪ ki/ WIK-ee) is a website that allows the easy [1] creation and editing of any number of interlinked web pages via a web browser using a simplified markup language or a WYSIWYG text editor. [2][3] Wikis are typically powered by wiki software and are often used to create collaborative wiki websites, to power community websites, for personal note taking, in corporate intranets, and in knowledge management systems.” ˈ w ɪ ki/WIK-eewebsite [1]interlinkedweb pagesweb browsermarkup languageWYSIWYG [2][3]wiki softwarenote takingintranetsknowledge management

 Some background... › “Wiki” comes from the Hawaiian word for “quick” › Site was formed in 2001 › “There are more than 91,000 active contributors working on more than 16,000,000 articles in more than 270 languages.”91,000 active contributors16,000,000 articles270 languages › Citation:

 Some tips: › When evaluating a Wikipedia source, remember to also check the top tabs: › Check the references section, and note while reading how many citations there are throughout the text

 What does Wikipedia cover? ›... Almost everything.  Who contributes to Wikipedia? › Any CAN contribute, but it is usually amateurs (see: Wikipedia’s “About” page)  Why contribute to Wikipedia? › Entertainment/outlet for expertise/etc.

 6 Degrees of Wikipedia (stolen shamelessly from 6 Degrees of Kevin Bacon): › Go to and look up a topic of your choice as a 1 st degree. Follow a link in the page to another topic for the 2 nd degree, and so on, until you get to a 6 th. We will then report on our page paths.

 1 st degree: Library -  2 nd degree: Information Literacy › Interesting external page found: gueDeclaration.pdf - “ Information Literacy encompasses knowledge of one’s information concerns and needs, and the ability to identify, locate, evaluate, organize and effectively create, use and communicate information to address issues or problems at hand; it is a prerequisite for participating effectively in the Information Society, and is part of the basic human right of life long learning.” gueDeclaration.pdf  3 rd degree: Technology Information Literacy - mation_Literacy mation_Literacy  4 th degree: Digital Literacy -  5 th degree: Multimedia Literacy  6 th degree: Media literacy - › “ Media literacy is a repertoire of competences that enable people to analyse, evaluate and create messages in a wide variety of media modes, genres and forms. Education for media literacy often uses an inquiry-based pedagogic model that encourages people to ask questions about what they watch, hear, and read. Media literacy education provides tools to help people critically analyze messages, offers opportunities for learners to broaden their experience of media, and helps them develop creative skills in making their own media messages.” › Wikipedia CAN be elegant

 Wikipedia as a “scholarly” resource, and why librarians need to be familiar with it: › Familiarity breeds usage – today’s students are so well-acquainted with Wikipedia that its use can threaten their desire and ability to use library resources that may be less user-friendly › It may be helpful as a jumping point, but should not be cited as a scholarly resource – students and patrons should be educated in using library resources when library staff get the chance (we pay a LOT for those databases!)

 Using a topic of your choice, use Wikipedia to create a bibliography of 3 resources that a student could appropriately use in a research report/paper. › Hint: Use the “References” section at the bottom of topic pages

 Browser-friendly  Easy to discover new topics  Beginner-friendly language may usually be found in complicated/difficult topics  Good for discovering new non-wiki resources  A space to share personal expertise as a contributor

 Anyone can contribute: content is largely unregulated and may not be rooted in peer-reviewed/scholarly research (or even accurate for that matter)  Should never be cited in a scholarly bibliography

 Some organizations, including libraries, have internal wikis for their organizations › Advantages include:  Replacing some of the functions of more resource-intensive shared-drives  Quick editing for staff reference of things like program times, trainings, guidelines and standards, etc.

 Subject-specific guides  Example: Lostpedia, the wiki for the popular ABC show “Lost” › › Can foster community growth › Can function as or incorporate an online forum

 Questions?  Next week: › Turn in final exam › iTunes, Podcasts, OpenUniversity