Hi all,

I'm not super current on the literature but the non-profit I work for just did some work in this area: https://wikiedu.org/blog/2017/06/19/what-students-learn-from-contributing-to-wikipedia/

We've also got a handy handout (heh) on theories of knowledge production on wikipedia which has some useful links and blurbs. 

-Adam

On Mon, Jul 17, 2017 at 2:45 PM, Jenemann, Laura <ljeneman@bu.edu> wrote:

Hi all,

 

It was a pleasure seeing everyone yesterday and meeting some of you for the first time.

 

I’m leading a discussion group on information literacy and wikipedia and am looking for a few good articles for a general audience of library staff.  For example:

 

Oliver, J. T. (2015). One-shot Wikipedia: an edit-sprint toward information literacy. Reference

    Services Review, 43(1), 81–97. https://doi.org/10.1108/RSR-10-2014-0043

 

Seligman, A. I. (2013). Teaching Wikipedia without Apologies. Writing History in the Digital Age.

 

Anyone have any suggestions to pass my way?

 

I’ve poured through the literature already but am wondering if there are book chapters that might be helpful.

 

Thanks for any suggestions you can provide!

 

Regards,

Laura

 

 

 


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--

Adam Hyland, work in progress