Wikimania Education Day 22

Today’s agenda at the Barbican is planning the education fringe programme for Wikimania. Along the way I am collecting a heap of useful training materials to look into.

TRAINING RESOURCES

Action Groups formed around the following topics and notes from participants over the weekend are collated in an Etherpad document.

  • Lightning talks open space
  • Instructor / Educators training
  • Ambassador training
  • Badge system for Wikipedia
  • Student panel
  • Practical resources development/hack session
  • Sandbox
  • Development iss
  • World Cafe sessionues
  • Local media wikis
  • Digital literacy
  • GLAM collaborations
  • Other collaborations

Referencing and citation issues
Of interest for future development is the idea that citation presentation and formatting could be made much easier, and this would do a lot to make adoption by the education community easier.
Separating citation content from presentation

Scottish schools
My interest in Scottish education was sparked by John Connell’s participation as part of the ASLA conference in Adelaide, as well as the research  I was involved in for the Ultranet and e-assessment projects in 2010-11. So it was great to meet Ian Stuart and John Johnston from the Scottish school sector – both working on GLOWScot Scotland’s education sector VLE. Also interested in wiki integration and authentication issues.

Still sorry to be missing Wikimania 2014 but pleased to be part of planning the education pre-conference. The Wikimania pre-conference programme is taking shape following all this hard work.

Wikimania 2015 is announced as Mexico City so perhaps that is something to work for.

Exhausted after two very full days of learning, thinking and networking I find my way back via the Tower of London, All Hallows’ Church and Tower Bridge.

Tower Bridge

Tower Bridge

Oratory All Hallow's Church

Oratory All Hallow’s Church

Tower of London

Tower of London

Future of education Day 21

By lots of luck and some pre-planning I am in London for the two day Future of Education workshop being run as a Wikimania 2014 Fringe event.

Barbican entrance sign

Barbican

After finding the way to the Barbican, and then inside it to the Frobisher Rooms, the day opens with LiAnna’s welcome and blanket game and getting sorted with brilliant wireless (which means the hashtag #wikimania should be worth following). It is good to get an overview of Wikimania 10 from the organisers even though I know I can’t be part of the actual event – in person at least.

Some highlights of the program today

Floor Koudijs gives a global overview of the Wikipedia Education Program.

Toni Sant, University of Hull, Wikimedia UK Education Organiser and organiser of this event, talks about WM-UK activities and references his paper at a recent conference on academic integrity in which he deconstructs the Turnitin whitepaper: What’s wrong with Wikipedia? This seems to be a great way into conversations with academics about sources which can be followed up with the video: Wikipedia editing basics: Plagiarism and copyright violation.

A session of lighting talks after morning tea highlight the great range of things happening across education from Scottish primary schools through to U3A. Fabian Tompsett, Wikimania organiser’s session entitled How open is open? is presented using Wikiversity.

It is fantastic to meet so many people who share my interests (and to learn about others not present who I should follow up with).

  • Tim Hunt, Open University – who  I have been following in twitter for many years
  • Marc Haynes, Wikipedian working on Welsh language Wikipedia projects
  • Andy Mabbett, ORCID and voice recording of live subjects
  • Charles Matthews, Moodle developer WMUK
  • Stevie Benton, WM UK Moodle

The dangerous part of workshops like this are that they generate ideas for what needs doing locally, and over the weekend I collate a long list of ideas for Wikimedia Australia.

Wikimedia Ambassador program
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Education_program/Ambassadors

  • develop a database of ambassadors
  • consider badges, service recognition
  • find existing Australian Wikipedia editors who are academics, librarians and higher education students and approach these as starter group

Education Outreach activities

  • Encourage the establishment of student societies of editors on campus and in secondary schools
  • Establish connections with professional associations and societies. Coordinate Wikimedians to present at their workshops and conferences. Fund editors with knowledge in related areas to attend society conferences and presentations and provide reports of related editing areas
  • Researcher support – workshops/training
  • International networking – support members to attend other association events

Wiki*edians in Residence
Check out reports from Martin Poulter, Wikimedia Ambassador at JISC.

Consider establishing the role of Wikimedia Australia Education Organiser. Get Toni’s role description as a starting point and
consider working in partnership with WMUK for education projects given our similar structures and existing networks.

Promote use of identifiers for Australian editors and subjects with both VIAF and ORCID. Easy instructions on how to add ORCID to Wikimedia user page.

Promote Wiki voice for Australians.
Twitter hashtag is #WikiVIP

Barbican Terrace

Barbican Terrace

I finish my Barbican day with another meal at the Food Court and foyer concerts of Mozart and Haydn’s first symphonies while waiting for the feature of the night: the Academy of Ancient Music’s Concert The Last Symphonies: Mozart No. 41, Haydn No. 102 and Beethoven No. 9 – all wonderfully performed.

Academy of Ancient Music on stage at the Barbican

Academy of Ancient Music on stage for Three Last Symphonies