Dear Wikimedians, and friends,
Join us today at 13:00 UTC (in 5 hours!) for the first information session on Training the Trainers of Reading Wikipedia in the Classroom program. We are looking forward to sharing more details and answer your questions. You can find the Zoom link and other details on the Meta page. https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Education/Reading_Wikipedia_in_the_Classroom...
Please reach out to me if you have any questions or face any problems joining the call.
Best! Sailesh
On Fri, Jul 23, 2021 at 12:17 AM Sailesh Patnaik spatnaik@wikimedia.org wrote:
Dear Wikimedians,
Last year, the Education team at the Wikimedia Foundation launched a pilot teacher training program that helped teachers use Wikipedia in their classrooms. Reading Wikipedia in the Classroom https://wikimediafoundation.org/our-work/education/reading-wikipedia-in-the-classroom/ provided a professional development opportunity to over 500 teachers in Bolivia, Morocco, and the Philippines with a localized curriculum and resources aligned with UNESCO’s Media and Information Literacy framework. Throughout this 9-week program, teachers developed vital media and information literacy skills for the 21st century, including understanding how information is produced, accessing and evaluating content online, and identifying biases and knowledge gaps. All through the power of Wikipedia https://www.k12digest.com/changing-the-narrative-the-power-of-wikipedia-to-foster-21st-century-skills/! You can read more details about the pilot program and its impact in our final report https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Reading_Wikipedia_Final_Report.pdf [1].
Now, we are opening up the opportunity to more Wikimedians, mission-aligned organizations, and individuals to participate in a Training of Trainers (ToT). By the end of the ToT, participants will be certified to lead training for Reading Wikipedia in the Classroom. They will be able to adapt & implement the Reading Wikipedia in the Classroom program in their local contexts to help teachers use Wikipedia as a pedagogical tool. Participants who successfully complete the ToT will also have access to a pool of funding that can support their local activities. You can learn more about the ToT timeline and curriculum on Meta https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Education/Reading_Wikipedia_in_the_Classroom/ToT .
We think you or members of your community would be a great fit! We invite you to attend an information session on Thursday, July 29 at 13:00 UTC via Zoom https://wikimedia.zoom.us/j/95280050770. The team will share more detailed information, answer questions, and announce the open call for applications. If you have any questions ahead of this event, please don’t hesitate to reach out to the team at education@wikimedia.org
We look forward to seeing you at the information session!
--the Education Team
[1]The program report https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Reading_Wikipedia_Final_Report.pdf shows us how teachers’ attitudes towards Wikipedia changed as they moved through the curriculum, responded to practical assignments and reflection questions, and participated in synchronous sessions led by local coordinators of the program. For example, one of the participating teachers from Bolivia said that at first he “thought that Wikipedia was a platform like Google, but now I value all the volunteer work done by the community behind it”. The program model also supported members of the local Wikimedia affiliates to improve their capacity to organize and lead education initiatives. Currently, the Wikimedians of Bolivia https://twitter.com/wikimedia_bo/status/1415057167804162049 user group is launching the second edition of the program! The resources https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Reading_Wikipedia_in_the_classroom created for the program are available on Wikimedia Commons in English, Spanish, Arabic, and Tagalog, and they are free for anybody to use, adapt and share. --
Sailesh Patnaik (He/Him)
Program Officer, Education
Wikimedia Foundation https://wikimediafoundation.org/