Wikis in Education

The Internet of Web 2.0 is all about collaborative and dynamic content, and this has had a huge impact in education and eLearning. I want to concentrate on just one ‘tool’, that of the ‘wiki’.

In a nutshell, a wiki is “a type of website that allows the visitors to add, remove, and sometimes edit the available content” or  a website that “includes the collaboration of work from many different authors”. Whether it’s limited access or global, the wiki can be used for many different purposes … information, documentation, assessment, etc.

According to Stewart Malder 38% of the responders to his poll are using a wiki as a knowledge base or source for documentation, with a further 17% as a tool for project management. However, this does not cover the education environment as the options offered are base more in ‘business’ than ‘academia’. The beauty of a wiki, as Arielle Pandolph writes, is that they are “flexible, easy to use, and don’t have a steep learning curve like a lot of technology tools”.

Benefits of using a wiki are undoubtedly that the wiki is fast, efficient collaboration giving the ability to collaboratively build projects, papers, and websites, and as a tool for gathering input “in an inclusive way”. Students like them because they make group projects easier to coordinate, teachers like them because they can interact with students throughout the course of a project or assignment, see their progress, and give them feedback along the way.

Wikis are commonly being used in higher education for (according to Arielle) group authoring, project development, peer review. We almost must identify the advantage of the wiki as a source of reducing email traffic for collaborative work.

If you want more information on a wiki, try Google. If you want more information on how to use them/it, stay tuned (subscribe to the RSS feed) and I’ll write about it again later.