On Nov 13, 2011, at 5:58 AM, Shiju Alex wrote:
Another strategy that we can adopt while doing this
program in India is, about the selection of articles for editing. We can ask students to
contribute to articles that they are interested in, rather than of all of them editing the
articles on the same topic.
The reason I am telling this is, In India (in general) it is not the students who are
deciding the course (and career) that they want to study/pursue. Parents, relatives, and
community around them decide that. So even though the student's interest may lie in a
specific area, he might be studying a different course.
Allowing students to edit in a topic that they like will bring in more original content.
But the issue with this methodology is, the role of Professors might be reduced, and the
role of CA and OA might be increased. And I am not sure how the
But this methodology is adopted very successfully in Kerala using School wiki. But we may
say, that is school children and they are not mature enough for wikipedia editing. Again
that is our misconception. In general, personally I am more interested to target school
students (high school and Plus 2) than college students. School children are fantastic. It
is true that most of us under estimate them. But to see the successful result from India,
see the young and wonderful wikipedians we have in Malayalam wikipedia and wikisource.
Note: Please note that I am replying to this thread as a Malayalam wiki community
memeber.
Shiju
Those are very valid points, Shiju. ...and we should and will take lessons from the
malayalam wikipedia and wikisource initiatives, and other similar ones. is what you are
suggesting something similar to a student's club
hisham