Talk:Wikipedia Primary School
Add topicPlease note that this page provides an overview about the project Wikipedia Primary School. --Iopensa (talk) 14:56, 13 May 2013 (UTC) Reply
Some links from Isla Haddow-Flood
- The mobile phone social network Mxit is working on a virtual school they have developed in conjunction with Unicef. One of the core components is the ability to do group study assignments using Wikipedia.
- Uganda: easing the strain on access to learning materials, http://www.eifl.net/news/uganda-easing-strain-access-learning-material
--Iopensa (talk) 13:12, 1 June 2013 (UTC) Reply
My impressions from the discussions at WikiSym and Wikimania 2013.
- Age groups. Wikipedia Primary School sounds like a project related to a age group (children), which is not necessarily the project focus. The project is more related to content than to people. Primary school in particular in low income countries and in challenging contest does not necessarily mean education for children.
- Links to current research. The project could benefit of research which at the moment doesn't have a thematic focus, i.e. assessment of Wikipedia articles, articles relations, current use of sources, Wikiprojects... It could represent a case study or an applied case for some of the current research if researchers are interested/willing to contribute.
- Articles (language and structure). The project could link with other projects related to Wikipedia for children (i.e. WikiKids, Wikimini...); it is also specifically relevant how access to Wikipedia on mobile phones (Wikipedia Zero) is rising the issue of how articles could be better structured to allow them to be more browsable on small screens or through sms (summaries, tables, structure of the paragraphs...).
- It is worth to add the project among the [[Research:Projects|research projects related to Wikipedia and the Wikimedia projects]. It is a way to inform about projects and to follow a more shared and transparent approach.
- The project implicitly criticizes offline Wikipedia distribution and Wikipedia Zero. In reality I didn't mean to criticized them, I actually consider those initiatives great opportunities which could maybe be reinforced by improving content.
--iopensa (talk) 05:49, 14 August 2013 (UTC) Reply
Didn't read closely enough to tell whether it has any practical reusability for primary school level, but interesting concept on how some selection procedures could be automated: Finding Prerequisite Relations using the Wikipedia Clickstream.
A concept graph can be used directly by a learner to explore the conceptual structure of the domain, like looking at a map, or it can be used by applications to recommend particular learning resources based on the prerequisites between concepts, as in the generation of structured reading lists [5].
Manually constructing a concept graph is time-consuming and requires significant domain knowledge, motivating automatic methods. We introduce an approach that infers prerequisite relations between concepts based on the navigation of users on Wikipedia.
Nemo 09:28, 22 April 2020 (UTC) Reply
I don't wish to sound churlish, but so much information on this project is old and out of date, with some laudedschemes such as Wikipedia Zero having ended back in 2018. I came here looking for resources to help me develop an online training session for international astronomy educators, who teach classes from 5-18yrs, and who are interested in knowing how they can use Wikipedia's resources to help them. Whilst there's much of general interest here, I have no idea how much, if any, of the content is current. Certainly the number of language Wikipedia, visit numbers etc will be very out of date, but many specific projects will, too, I would imagine.
I wonder if anyone is able to update the project pages to make them more useful for today's audience, and remove content that is no longer relevant or applicable?
Failing that, should the pages here all be marked with Template:Historical? Nick Moyes (talk) 13:59, 27 January 2024 (UTC) Reply