I very much appreciate discussions like this on the list. I, too, will
be speaking this March at an academic conference on the ethics of
teaching distance education literature (like surveys and such)
courses. Some of my initial thoughts are on my blog:
<http://litmuse.maconstate.edu/~glucas/archives/000468.shtml>
<http://litmuse.maconstate.edu/~glucas/archives/000465.shtml>
I have not really begun too much research into this yet for a couple
of reasons: (1) I'm going to rely on my own primary data, and (2) I'm
busy. However, I have begun at least thinking about it, and this
conversation has helped. I appreciate the link to Wikipedia -- thanks
Jamie -- and I'm just wondering if anyone has any more suggestions
about what I could read as far as using wikis in teaching humanities
courses. Any suggestions would be appreciated.
Cheers,
Jerry
BTW, my own course wiki (LitWiki) is linked off my web site:
<http://litmuse.maconstate.edu/>
On Sun, 14 Nov 2004 16:10:27 -0500, Jamie Bliss
<astronouth7303(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On Fri, 12 Nov 2004 22:07:34 -0500, ilooy
<ilooy.gaon(a)gmail.com> wrote:
[clip]
Such questions are in the Wikipedia FAQ and Help. (specifically,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Our_responses_to_our_critics
may be of interest.)
Good luck in future presentations!
-- Jamie
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http://endeavour.zapto.org/astro73/
Thank you to JosephM for inviting me to Gmail!
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