Emily Kugler – THATCamp New England 2014 http://newengland2014.thatcamp.org Fri, 06 Jun 2014 19:03:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.12 Session Proposal: Wikipedia, Pedagogy, and Hacktivism http://newengland2014.thatcamp.org/2014/05/27/session-proposal-wikipedia-pedagogy-and-hacktivism/ Tue, 27 May 2014 15:29:10 +0000 http://newengland2014.thatcamp.org/?p=227 Continue reading ]]>

Apologies for the tardy proposal. This could fall under either category of Talk or Teach.

The main focus of this session would be the use of Wikipedia (and other popular online tools, like Twitter) in the classroom. What has worked for you, what hasn’t, etc.  Part of this comes out of conversations around the Writing for Wadewitz Tribute Edit-A-Thons organized to honor a scholar who helped promote Wikipedia as a pedagogical tool (here’s the brochure she wrote on the topic).Given that there’s been multiple Tribute Edit-A-Thons in New England (plus the upcoming one in June), the session could also cover planning events like Wikipedia Write-Ins and Hack Days in academic settings.

Related to this proposal (but not its main focus): Part of what intrigues me about this subject is that there is a social justice element underneath the Wikipedia assignments and events (whether it is increasing the visibility of underrepresented groups as subjects and editors or more broadly, promoting the spread of basic digital literacy).  I haven’t observed this as much in other assignments using social media (e.g., connecting Twitter assignments to activist hashtags such as the current #YesAllWomen and the earlier #SolidarityIsForWhiteWomen), but perhaps that is because I’m academically located in Early Modern and Eighteenth-Century discussions?

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