Thanks Janet,
On 07/30/2014 12:47 PM, Janet Swisher wrote:
Sounds cool, Patrick.
I think you're spot on that contributing to a wiki is a great way to
experience the collaborative nature of open source, without needing a
lot of coding skills. When you say that you would manage the
"committer" role, do you mean that you would be the gatekeeper to
getting changes into the "real" wiki?
Well I think there is a practical
and academic purpose for this. On the
practical side, I'd want to make sure the wiki was not bombarded with
contributions that may require more management than the wiki community
can support. In addition, I want to understand (for assessment
purposes), and help the class discover (team/project-based learning),
the various motivations and activities that drive collaboration,
peer-production and co-creation. In reality, there is nothing to stop
anyone or all of the students to joining up on their own. But as this is
a course with specific learning objectives, I'd like to be able to
monitor and evaluate their work.
I guess that's a reasonable approximation of how open source code
projects work, even if it's not very wiki-ish.
Agreed, but this effort has a
broader context.
Do you have projects in mind for them to work on on TOSW?
Part
of the curriculum will cover self-organization (self-organizing
groups who come together around affinity interests, who then self
organize themselves into specific roles and self-direct to choose what
they want to do). That's a long way of simply saying they will be able
to identify their own projects/topics to participate in.
Do you know about the School of Open at P2PU?
http://schoolofopen.p2pu.org/ There may be resources there that would
be useful to you.
Thank you very much I will check that out. I see you are with
Mozilla.
I've been following along with the Webmaker activities to pull ideas from.