EduTech Wiki:About

The educational technology and digital learning wiki
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Welcome to EduTechWiki !

Purpose and Scope of EduTech Wiki

  • Originally, this Wiki has been created as support for a course on "Virtual Projects" (project-oriented pedagogies) by a team from TECFA in the framework of eTeach-Net, a joint project involving 9 higher education institutions in Switzerland. DKS uses it to prepare an introduction to the field of educational technology ( outline ).
  • Both wikis (en/fr) are also used within courses of TECFA's MALTT MSc program in educational technology. Students did participate in wiki writing trough a formal writing-to-learn course, e.g. STIC-3 in fall 2006. Others (but too few) prepare literature reviews for their master or PhD thesis projects (see the french version).
  • You also may use this wiki for your own teaching. It can be used as a research tool (initial definitions and pointers to other resources) for student projects. With some additions, edutech wiki might become a light-weight cognitive flexibility hypertext. But for the moment, there is absolutly no built-in pedagogy! If you plan to involve your students with writing activities, please read Bringing classes to EduTech Wiki and send DSchneider a short mail. Typically, students are not used to wiki writing so you'd have to do a minimum of preparation. I addition, wiki cultures are different, e.g. our editorial guidelines are not the same as in Wikipedia.

Plans for the larger community

This Wiki is open to larger public for writing, but we will keep control. However, there are less constraints than for Wikipedia and you may sign your contributions with your name and organization. Also, overall organization (e.g. categories) will certainly evolve. Nothing is written down in stone, but please have a look at editorial guidelines.

History and origin of this Wiki

This wiki was created in February 2006 to support a Swiss virtual campus sponsored course. Currently, its scope is much wider.

The eTeach-Net Project

This Wiki was initiated within module 7 of eTeach-Net, a Swiss virtual campus project that ended by March 2007.

eTeach-Net was a joint project involving 9 higher education institutions in Switzerland (UniGE, UniSG, UniBS,USI, ETHZ, SUPSI, BFH, FHNW, ZFH) and also training organizations. The major objective of the project was to develop reusable teaching modules about technical, pedagogical and didactic concepts of e-teaching. These modules are mainly integrated into the curricula of postgraduate studies: For example a sequence of five modules are part of a course for the International Engineering Educator Diploma (ING-PAED IGIP). Some of the materials/activities developed in the overal project are also used for faculty development (in particular by partners from support structures).

Module 7 "Virtual Projects"

This Wiki has been set up for the Module 7 "Virtual Projects" course. Projects have become the common element of almost any work activity. The module introduces methods and tools for the efficient organization and management of project-based teaching. The principal role of this Wiki initially was to support writing-to-learn teaching scenarios we use with our students, i.e. although we did write pieces on project-oriented learning ourselves, other pieces are added by students and existing content is altered and/or annotated by students.

Module 7 team members were: Daniel K. Schneider (eTeach-Net and module 7 project leader), Roberto Ortelli (eTeach-Net coordinator, left project in June 2006), and Stephane Lattion (left project in Dec 2007) and Kalli Benetos (from Jan-March 2007).

Current status

While this Wiki has been initiated through the eTech-Net project, DKS decided in Feb. 2006 to expand the scope of what was inititially planned within the framework of module 7 to the whole domain of educational technology. This move was initiated by a contract from a distance teaching university to write an introduction to educational technology.

Therefore we also changed the name of this wiki from "eTeach-Net Wiki" to "Edutech Wiki" at some point.

Objectives and outcomes - my december 2007 view

(I submitted this as an extended abstract to an EdMedia 2008 best practice session. If accepted, I'll expand this into a real paper with some more data - Daniel K. Schneider).

One of the greatest challenges to educational technologists is to apply our research to ourselves, e.g. use technology to enhance our own intellectual development, as well as the way we teach and interact with others. There are many explanations why technology is underused, even by educational technologists. One can be found in the uncomfortable relationship between research and teaching. Boyer (1997) distinguishes between scholarship of discovery, integration, application and teaching. At least in European research universities only the first one (research) is relevant in terms of career planning. In other words, it is a bad strategy to invest in time-consuming technology-enhanced pedagogies, in collective knowledge building/integration or in application activities. However, I believe that most academics still would agree that these would be "nice to have".

Edutech Wiki is an attempt by an educational technologist to lower the cost of engagement in Boyer’s "lesser" scholarships though using the same medium for multiple purposes, e.g. preparation of literature reviews, integration of ideas, teaching materials preparation, activity-based teaching (writing-to-learn), tutoring and finally sharing and co-constructing with others. I will report on some outcomes, both measurable ones and subjective impressions. We suggest that some of this work can be considered domain independent good practice.

Edutechwiki

I started working on Edutech Wiki about 2 years ago in order to create a support tool for a course on project-oriented teaching. At some point, I decided to turn it into a multi-purpose tool. Currently the two wiki versions (English and French) include over 800 articles of various length (between one and 40 pages). Entries cover various subject matters related closely or loosely to the field of educational technology. I wrote about 80% of the contents and did profit from other’s contributions.

The wiki is open for writing to everyone. Only one out of the other top contributors was from outside my direct circle of influence (i.e. co-workers or paid graduate students) and this gave me the idea to focus on an individual’s return on investment (myself).

Purposes and outcomes

Over time, a whole set of use cases (purposes) for scholarly activities emerged. Some now can be considered interesting practice, some are yet open and some are a failure. Below is a provisional summary of purposes and direct outcomes (for me as author/user) and indirect outcomes (for others).

PurposesYou may Outcomes (personal) Outcomes (what other say) Comments
A tool for note taking and mapping out ideas: I used this wiki to prepare a 200-page textbook for a distance teaching university.
I now have the subjective (sorry) impression to have gained a good understanding about the various strands that make up the field of educational technology.
Only occasional contributors from "outside". Most contributors fix little mistakes. I did not actively try to find contributors or even encourage passive use of this web site, except once at the Dallas AECT Annual conference. Only elder accomplished instructional designers showed interest in the concept. The younger population didn’t show interest.
A medium for writing-to-learn activities: Implemented in 2 of my courses. Students had to write and complete entries. Results were satisfactory and students were motivated. Implemented by one co-worker and so far only in one class "from cyberspace" (see Guth, 2007). Some student contributions turned out to be useful to me as researcher and developer.
A resource kit for educational technology teaching Implemented in 2 of my technical classes, as well as workshops. I found some links to Edutech Wiki in other teachers’ course pages Extent of external use is difficult to measure, given the locked nature of today’s learning management systems.
A medium to prepare structured teaching materials (alternative to Word or IMS CPs) I wrote a quickly made introduction to Flash (about 200 pages). I got very good help from a person I didn't know before. Marielle Lange found the project interesting and started to produce nice ActionScript tutorials and more to come :) Since these lecture notes are of mediocre quality, it is very useful to be able to fix them in real time. In addition, students in principle can fix things and comment.
A replacement of LMS technology (e.g. Moodle) In one course, I successfully used the discussion page as "anchored Forums" (STIC I) Others can and do use tutorials (access statistics) However, I did not see any progress in terms of student participation What I gained was mainly speed.
Putting myself and our unit on the "map" - Edutechwiki gets many top 20 hits on Google. Given the poor quality of some articles, this is quite amazing. It also could be interpreted as testimonial on the quality and richness of alternative open resources on educational technology…
A resource kit for researchers to prepare literature reviews and such This wiki did become my "external memory" for all sorts of scholarly activities. No data Back links can be found on bookmarking sites like del.icio.us, on blogs and web pages of academics.
A resource kit for practitioners, e.g. teachers and designers: I sometimes can use the wiki as reference, e.g. there are some installation notes or models to plan instructional activities Same as above, I don’t have data, only indirect evidence that people are using it There are some articles for "just-in-time open" learning, e.g. instructional design models or technical mini-tutorials.
Quality: So far, most wiki entries lack content, depth, style, authority or all four together. However, summarized concepts, ideas, quotations and references turned out to be valuable for my personal use (textbook writing, teaching, literature reviewing etc.) No data, except some positive comments here and there on the web. As I said above, my personal main goal was idea management. It remains to be seen if I will be able to manage both volume and quality, and to what extent there will be more contributors who will help at least a bit.
A tool for our PHD and Master students to prepare literature reviews. Unless they were paid or had to do class work, they not only failed to contribute, but they also progress much too slowly with their thesis projects… A few references to Edutech Wiki entries in student papers. This must be considered a real failure …

Wiki design

A related, but different outcome concerns wiki design. We believe that such spaces need to be carefully designed and that this process needs time. Indeed, from related experiments with other wikis we found that unorganized wikis quickly could turn into an unmanageable space that badly supports knowledge building. The main page should emphasize important entry points for navigation and clearly state the goals of this "space". Entries’ titles must be short and meaningful. The category system, which allows multiple tagging of articles, should reflect the domain: in our case, educational technology and related fields. Additional categories can be created to help students navigate through pages that are related to a course. Special banners on top of each page define their status (e.g. incomplete or stub). Editing and copyright rules clearly tell users and potential contributors what they can do with contents. E.g. we define both a default copyright and accept other copyrights in order to deal with various needs. It also was essential to add some extensions, e.g. links visualization, semi-automatic author insertion and generation of PDF "books" for lists or articles or categories.

Conclusion

Personally speaking, we consider this wiki to a success. It became an instrument of synergy between several activities and a good example of how a single university lecturer can combine several kinds of scholarship with the help of a specific medium. It however, remains to be seen whether there will be a net gain for research (I "lost" more than 6 month), but I am satisfied with this wiki’s usefulness in teaching, integration of ideas and (some) application. My point is not that wikis may be useful in education (there are many papers about this), but that wikis can be multi-purpose systems that offer enough return on investment. I also believe that the principle could be applied to most other academic domains. Indeed, from my extended inventories about the pedagogical use of technology I get the impression that innovation is as much driven by the field (ie. by all sorts of curious researchers/teachers from very different fields) than it is by our research...

So far, Edutech Wiki is not a best practice case for knowledge community building. This may never happen because of the public goods dilemma: "It does not follow, because all of the individuals in a group would gain if they achieved their group objective, that they would act to achieve that objective, even if they were all rational and self-interested" (Olson, 1971: 2). Indeed, most academic wikis are rather poor in content and this will not change, unless some researchers/teachers can find very personal reasons to engage in such an endeavor. I hope to have identified a few.

Bibliography

Boyer, E. (1997). Scholarship Reconsidered: Priorities of the Professoriate. Jossey-Bass.

Guth, Sarah (2007). Wikis in Education: Is Public Better?, WikiSym'07 October 21-23, 2007, Montréal, Québec, Canada. http://www.wikisym.org/_publish/Guth_WikiSym2007_IsPublicBetter.pdf

Olson, Mancur (1971). Logic of Collective Action: Public Goods and the Theory of Groups, Harward University Press.