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Working with wikis: Collaborative writing in the 21 st Century Katina Zammit School of Education KCKS 2010 Brisbane, Australia

Zammit 22 09 10_kcks

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Presentation given at the World Computers Conference, 2010 in the Knowledge Competencies in the Knowledge Society, on 22.9.2010.

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Working with wikis:Collaborative writing in the 21st

Century Katina Zammit

School of Education

KCKS 2010

Brisbane, Australia

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Wikis• The word ‘wiki’ (from the Hawaiian wiki wiki) is translated

as ‘to hurry’, and wikis certainly enable rapid and easy authoring direct to the Web (Parker & Chao, 2007; Wheeler, Yeomans, & Wheeler, 2008 )

• enable students to collaboratively construct knowledge beyond just information gathering and sharing. (Lamb & Johnson, 2009; Wheeler, Yeomans, & Wheeler, 2008)

• ‘architecture of participation’ (O’Reilly, 2004 cited in Wheeler, Yeomans, & Wheeler,

2008, p. 989)

• ‘wisdom of the masses’

• publish content direct to the Web, including text, images and hyperlinks; to edit existing content; track changes; to return to previous versions (in history function). (Hazari, North, &

Moreland; Morgan & Smith, 2008; Wheeler, Yeomans, & Wheeler, 2008)

Katina Zammit

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Benefits • Develop a community of practice

– help student groups communicate and develop their "paper" more effectively. (Malaga, 2010, p. 53)

– Learners participate in collaboratively building resources. (Parker & Chao, 2007)

• allows the instructor to provide continuous early feedback.

• help students learn about an important information technology trend.

• students shift from being consumers of the Internet to creators (Lamb & Johnson, 2009)

Katina Zammit

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• energizes reluctant learners, promote group synergy, and encourage authentic learning. (Lamb & Johnson, 2009)

• help students with reading, writing, reflective, and collaborative learning skill across content areas (Lamb & Johnson, 2009; Leight, 2008, cited in

Hazari, North, & Moreland, p.190)

– students are more engaged with the writing process. (Morgan & Smith, 2008)

Katina Zammit

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• students tend to protect their ideas– happy to post their contributions for other group members to

read, – resistant to having their contributions altered or deleted by other

group members. (Parker & Chao, 2007; Wheeler et al 2008)

• the limited capacity of the free wiki software has a detrimental effect on multiple user editing. – unable to cope with the simultaneous posting. (Wheeler et al 2008)

• students contribute only when in class. (Wheeler et al 2008, p. 993)

• students tend to read only those pages to which they had contributed (Wheeler et al 2008, p. 993)

• the time to learn how the wiki works. (Ruth & Houghton, 2009)

Katina Zammit

Issues

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Wikis in education• stimulate writing ('fun' and 'wiki' are often associated);• provide a low-cost but effective communication and

collaboration tool (with an emphasis on text rather than software);

• promote the close reading, revision, and tracking of preliminary work;

• discourage 'product oriented writing' while facilitating 'writing as a process'; and

• ease students into writing for a wider audience • Lamb (2004, cited in Parker and Chao, p. 61)

• cost, complexity, control, clarity, • WYSWYG (Malaga, 2010, p. 50)

Katina Zammit

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Katina Zammit

Research question

• What is the educational impact of integrating wikis into a classroom?– What changes occur to a teacher’s pedagogy?– What is the impact on students’ learning and

engagement in learning?– What are the benefits of using a wiki to create a

multimodal information report in comparison to a paper-based medium?

– What are the issues of using a wiki?

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Katina Zammit

Theoretical frames

• Educational linguistics• Semiotics / Multiliteracies and multimodality• Technology and literacy

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Katina Zammit

Methodology• Qualitative

– Multiple case studies– Action research cycle– Constant comparative

• Data sources– Work samples: electronic and paper– Criteria based assessments– Teacher interviews– Field notes and Observations – Student focus group interview– Student questionnaire

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School context

73% LBOTE – 38% Chinese speaking, 29 different language groups– 42% of students have been learning English for three years or less– 17 indigenous students

260 students 11 classes7 specialist teachers

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Katina Zammit

Classroom Contexts

• 2 classes– Year 5 (11 year olds) and year 4/5 (10 and 11 year

olds)– 2 teachers: experienced (female) and new graduate

(male)

• Computer acess– Laptop trolley (x14)– 4 PC– Year 5: Interactive Whiteboard

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Writing - term 2

Information report

- Country

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Katina Zammit

Wiki - term 3/4#1 [9/9/09]

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Katina Zammit

#4

[30/10/09]

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Katina Zammit

# 7 (final)

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Best aspects• Process

• Location (anywhere)• To take notes• Compare work with others work• Working with others• Not carrying books etc around• Typing (is better/ is easier)• People help each other• No paper, use computer • Send emails to each other • Remember info more when type • Easy way to learn • Paragraph from notes

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• Content• about Antarctica• Know more: than if writing; can remember information better

• about specific section of wiki • new facts

• Technology• Technical: fonts, colour, adding media, hyperlinking• Use of tech increased/ better• Website visiting• Improve typing• About wiki

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Outcomes• Collaboration

– Working with a partner– Helping others– Asking for assistance via email - to students / teacher

• Teacher input– Explicit teaching of e-note taking– Assistance with content -

• in class; on wiki via questions or email

• Student input– More involvement of disengaged students– More input from students from ESL and with learning difficulties

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Katina Zammit

• Use of technology to create text– use of e-note taking– Information placed, re-worked on wiki– Direct input of multimodal texts (written, visual, audio

and video) onto wiki page– Hypermedia - use of hyperlinks– Typography: fonts, colour, – Location of working on text

• Knowledge of the content area

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• Assessment – Students can compare their work– Rubric

• Not just based on final product• Included content, process and collaboration

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• students tend to protect their ideas• the limited capacity of the free wiki software has a

detrimental effect on multiple user editing. • students contribute only when in class. • students tend to read only those pages to which they

had contributed• the time to learn how the wiki works.

Katina Zammit

Issues??

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Katina Zammit

Issues

• Getting students to change information on someone’s wiki page/s – the text or layout of partner– Changing, adding or moving the texts of other’s

• Working on the wiki simultaneously– Student solutions

• Work on 1 computer at school• Work in Word while partner working on wiki page

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• Limitations of design features– Of Wikispaces

• Access for use– System controls and permissions– Portal for students

Katina Zammit

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Hazari, S., North, A., & Moreland, D. Investigating Pedagogical Value of Wiki Technology. Journal of Information Systems Education, 20(2), 187-198.

Lamb, A., & Johnson, L. (2009). Wikis and collaborative inquiry. School Library Media Activities Monthly, 8(April), 48-51.

Malaga, R. (2010). Choosing a wiki platform for student projects - Lessons learned. Contemporary Issues In Education Research, 3(2), 49-54.

Morgan, B., & Smith, R. (2008). A wiki for classroom writing. The Reading Teacher 62(1), 80-82.

Parker, K. R., & Chao, J. T. (2007). Wiki as a teaching tool. Interdisciplinary Journal of Knowledge and Learning Objects, 3, 57-72.

Ruth, A., & Houghton, L. (2009). The wiki way of learning. Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 25(2), 135-152.

Wheeler, S., Yeomans, P., & Wheeler, D. (2008). The good, the bad and the wiki: Evaluating student generated content for collaborative learning. British Journal of Educational Technology, 39(6), 987-995.

Katina Zammit

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Katina Zammit

Thankyou

[email protected]