This is definitely an interesting discussion that has been ongoing in the
Arab world education programs as well.
In Egypt, the program adopted a byte threshold/goal in most classes. Bytes
do allow for quick, surface level evaluation to see how much students are
contributing. Our ambassadors seem to appreciate having a benchmark for
student contributions, but we have also gotten pushback from the Arabic
Wikipedian community fearing that the primary focus is quantity, and not
quality contributions (like Craig mentions). Most of our students in Egypt
do translation assignments, so it is often more important to select high
quality content in the other language, and ensure that students are not
copying and pasting machine translations and wikifying their contributions.
I've noticed students in Egypt like having a numeric goal more than their
teachers do.
Here's an example course
page<https://ar.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D9%88%D9%8A%D9%83%D9%8A%D8%A8%D9%8A%…
an English translation class at Ain Shams University. You'll notice
they set a 50kb threshold, and also have a section for additional
contributions of 5kb each. (To compare these numbers to English/latin
scripts, you should halve the bytes because of the Arabic script which
"inflates" the number):
Like all assignment guidelines, having a byte benchmark might be a
necessary evil, just like traditional writing assignments tend to have
minimum word count or pages. Depends on your context and goals. It would
depend on the rest of the assignment and the rubric you would use to
evaluate the assignment. Giving more weight to proper writing style and
citations would probably be a good place to start.
Juliana, it does sound like you want your students to contribute more since
they're stopping when they reach the minimum. That sounds like normal
student behavior. Would there be a different way to motivate students to
keep editing with extra points for going beyond the minimum thresholds, for
example? Or a competition for number of bytes, articles created, citations
added (they could all have different weights and be evaluated in
conjunction with quality checks).
I'd love to hear more thoughts on the topic since it's something I struggle
with as well!
Tighe
On Tue, Jan 28, 2014 at 9:06 AM, Laura Hale <laura(a)fanhistory.com> wrote:
On Tue, Jan 28, 2014 at 2:12 AM, Juliana Bastos Marques <
domusaurea(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Has anyone used this approach? Pros/cons? What would you consider a
reasonable number for the minimum of bytes in the final article?
Juliana.
I have seen this done for classes, but the problem sometimes becomes
students look at it as a exercise in adding content but ignore Wikipedia
guidelines. They end up adding essay like material, add information that
makes existing tags worse in order to add material related to the course,
etc.
Speculating, I would think a potential better criteria might be adding
references to uncited materials related to the topic as there is a lot of
unsourced material. They would be adding pure bytes by adding sources. It
would also assist in making them more familiar with other sources that you
may think valuable for them to be aware of.
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Tighe Flanagan
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