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This link has been bookmarked by 22 people . It was first bookmarked on 15 Apr 2009, by someone privately.

  • 14 Jun 09
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  • 20 Apr 09
    mapjdlinks
    paul lowe

    Towards a Process for K-12 Students as Content Producers

    Beyond the Blog - Leveraging Wikis for Curriculum & Instruction

    I am frequently asked to clarify what I mean by "students as producers of content", and how that would fit into a school district’s curriculm. This outlines in brief fashion an approach doing just that using wiki-based collaborative writing technologies.

    Our primary use of wikis in the district started out with collaborative curriculum content production. It’s what we’ve been referring to as our "Currwikulum process" for a few years. We crack ourselves up, and can only imagine Elmer Fudd as our spokesmodel.

    wikis assessment writing education e_learning

  • 17 Apr 09
  • 16 Apr 09
    pauljinks
    Paul Jinks

    Leveraging wikis for curriculum and instruction.

    wikis assessment education web2.0 elearning

  • 15 Apr 09
      • These non-sequential stages of the writing process vary by author, but this is a widely accepted description:


        • Planning & Pre-Writing: Getting your ideas, interests, and/or assignment parameters
        • Collaborating: Most workplace writing involves collaborative production of writing
        • Researching: Seeking information to support your writing
        • Drafting: Forming thought while writing about the topic
        • Editing: Deciding what needs to change
        • Reviewing: Getting the opinions of others about what you’ve written
        • Revising: Making changes you’ve decided through editing and reviewing work
        • Publishing: Connecting the writer to the reader by making a finished product more widely available and public
  • robthill
    Rob Hill

    Assessment of Wikis

    wikis assessment ict education

  • sheasmith
    Shea Smith

    Beyond the Blog - Leveraging Wikis for Curriculum & Instruction

    assessment curriculum wikis blogs education

  • ransomtech
    Steve Ransom

    Towards a Process for K-12 Students as Content Producers

    wikis blogs blogging integration curriculum ideas

  • willrich
    Will Richardson

    Our primary use of wikis in the district started out with collaborative curriculum content production. It’s what we’ve been referring to as our "Currwikulum process" for a few years. We crack ourselves up, and can only imagine Elmer Fudd as our spokesmodel.

    For the most part, curriculum is still our most imporant use. In the last year or two, however, we have begun to see wiki tools as having a direct connection to classroom writing instruction, place-based educational projects, and other activities requiring student content production. This blog entry is a rough look at how we see wikis for instructional use in the classroom from the viewpoint of students as producers, not just consumers of wiki content.

    wikis 3rdedition assessment

    • Our primary use of wikis in the district started out with collaborative curriculum content production. It’s what we’ve been referring to as our "Currwikulum process" for a few years. We crack ourselves up, and can only imagine Elmer Fudd as our spokesmodel.


      For the most part, curriculum is still our most imporant use. In the last year or two, however, we have begun to see wiki tools as having a direct connection to classroom writing instruction, place-based educational projects, and other activities requiring student content production. This blog entry is a rough look at how we see wikis for instructional use in the classroom from the viewpoint of students as producers, not just consumers of wiki content.

    • Teachers who use do Web 2.0 technologies such as blogs for Writing Process style instruction in the K-12 classroom can use wiki tools as the next logical step. Contributing to a wiki site, such as our Open Content Curriculum site in BSSD, or Wikipedia itself would subject that written content to peer and outside scrutiny and editing by other users of that site.
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