Wiki-based learning in the classroom

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Revision as of 12:59, 17 January 2008 by Jeremy Michalek (Talk | contribs)
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Contents

Discussion points

I'm finding it hard to break things up my ideas into all the subheadings. For example, in talking about one of my class wiki assignments, elements of collaborative writing, community building, peer-to-peer interaction, ... all come up. I think it makes the most sense to tell the whole story at one time.

We can expand on the background/literature review in the final version of the paper.

Introduction

A wiki (derived from the Hawaiian word for quick) is a type of website that provides a framework for users to interactively and collaboratively build a database of interrelated information quickly and easily. Wikipedia (ref http://www.wikipedia.org), currently featuring more that two million articles in English alone, is the most well known wiki, but wikis can also be targeted to smaller audiences, such as an engineering class. Lamb (ref) discusses the use of wikis in an academic environment. He provides an overview of the wiki concept, addresses common concerns about wikis (e.g., "If anyone can edit my text, then anybody can ruin my text", copyright issues), and presents some of the associated pedagogical challenges. Others (refs) have addressed similar issues.

Our objective in this paper is to describe our specific experiences with wikis and teaching mechanical engineering classes, both positive and negative. We will discuss our use of wikis in teaching a capstone senior design course and graduate courses in design optimization and small scale heat transfer. In all three courses, a wiki provides (i) logistical benefits to the instructor compared to a traditional web page, and (ii) an interactive and collaborative online-environment in which students can drive their own learning experience. In all three courses, the wiki is designed to grow in subsequent offerings, providing a basis and standard for future students. In addition to discussing the benefits of course wikis to both instructors and students, we will also describe the process of setting up and maintaining a wiki on a web server.

Wiki software

Most wiki software is open source code, and numerous wiki engines are freely available. The most popular one is MediaWiki, the same engine used for Wikipedia. MediaWiki is written in the hypertext scripting language PHP, incorporating a database management system. We choose and also recommend using MediaWiki to setup a classroom wiki for several reasons:

  1. It has large-scale database capabilities and high operational reliability;
  2. the installation and maintenance processes are simple and friendly;
  3. MediaWiki has its own wiki, offering users comprehensive instructions about installation, maintenance, and updating; and
  4. MediaWiki offers an integrated math-formula display function similar to the LaTeX math syntax. This important feature, especially for scientific and engineering courses, provides a convenient protocol to display mathematical symbols and formulations on a wiki page.

Linux is recommended for the operating system platform of a wiki because it is open source and has strong security features. Prior to installing the main wiki program, the PHP interpreter, HTTP server (e.g. Apache web server), and database server (e.g. MySQL) should be installed. Detailed installation procedures can be found in the corresponding websites.

A well-designed wiki program should be easy to maintain by the administrator. From our experiences, the maintenance responsibilities for a class wiki include:

  1. user account management,
  2. wiki page management,
  3. database and file backups,
  4. system updating, and
  5. security issue handing.

MediaWiki provides a well-designed web interface for wiki administration. Backups and updates can be performed by following the procedures from the MediaWiki website. Security issues require an additional tool. A plug-in program called reCAPTCHA, developed at Carnegie Mellon University, is recommended. reCAPTCHA can effectively block malicious automatic registrations and spam by requiring users to read and interpret short distorted text graphics that are difficult for computer programs to read automatically prior to making changes that contain external links.

Editing a wiki page is simple and straightforward. The majority of graduate and undergraduate students in our experience have worked with wikis outside of class, and they are able to begin editing immediately without special instruction. "Advanced" topics such as formatting of tables or writing equations generally require a reference, but using MediaWiki means that all of these items are identical to Wikipedia, and therefore Wikipedia pages can be referenced for advanced information. Furthermore, Wikipedia text falls under the GNU Free Documentation License; therefore, any Wikipedia page can be copied into a new wiki, so long as the Wikipedia source is identified.

In addition, each user is able to select her own settings to define how she would like to view wiki content. For example, headings can be numbered in outline format (section 1.1, etc.) or can be shown without numbers; a table of contents can be automatically added for pages with several headings; and each user can select which aesthetic "skin" to use.

Professor Michalek's Design Decisions Wiki (DDWiki) is located at http://ddl.me.cmu.edu/ddwiki/. Professor McGaughey's Nanoscale Transport Phenomena Wiki (NTPWiki) is located at http://ntpl.me.cmu.edu/ntplwiki/.

Course management

Wiki-based learning provides several advantages for course management including

  1. efficient and customized options for information dissemination;
  2. an enhanced ability to construct course notes that are modular, layered, and interlinking;
  3. an enhanced ability to monitor student progress and contributions; and
  4. scheduling and team formation.

We will examine each of these items in turn.


Information dissemination

For the course instructor, the wiki provides a web environment in which to disseminate information about the class. Like a regular website, the course schedule, policies, homework assignments, and important documents can be made available. In addition, the wiki encourages links to related pages. For example, the class schedule may include a list of topics that will be discussed in each lecture. For those topics that have a related wiki page or course notes on the wiki, links can be made simply by surrounding the text with [[double square brackets]].

The wiki interface provides a convenient way to update and modify information, as the editing can be performed directly from a web browser with no need for specialized or external software. The wiki can be updated from any computer with internet access and has many convenient built-in features (e.g., tables, equations, etc.). The "preview" feature allows the author to see her changes before submitting them formally on the wiki. From the student perspective, information dissemination from the instructor through the wiki is the same as it would be on a regular web page, except that students may also subscribe to receive email alerts and/or RSS feeds to monitor updates and changes to course material in whatever customized format the student prefers. This feature can be particularly useful for students to monitor changes made to the course schedule or assignment due dates throughout the semester.

Wikis can be set up to restrict read or write access to an approved list of editors; however, we have not found this to be necessary. By allowing anyone to edit the wiki simply by choosing a user name and password, administrative work is minimized. Further, if the instructor signs up for email alerts and adds the course page to her watch list, she will receive an email immediately if the page is ever edited by anyone other than herself. In the even of vandalism, reverting the page to a prior version is as easy as clicking a button; however, the authors have not experienced any problems with vandalism or any need to police the pages.

Finally, a wiki-based course website can also be used to provide prospective students, fellow educators, or corporate sponsors with layered information about course content, organization, and past student contributions.


Course notes

Course notes, particularly if they are prepared using LaTeX, can readily be placed on the wiki. These pages can then be made open to students, where they can add questions, make changes, and initiate discussion of points that are not clear to them. In this way, the instructor can get immediate feedback from students after they have had time to digest material, helping them to plan out future lectures. Students will also be able to catch errors or ask critical-thinking questions, and the instructor can even set up a reward system for insightful student input. Thus, the notes will be in a dynamic state throughout the semester, and they can be updated and reused in future course offerings or even for other courses with overlapping material. Course notes can also easily be linked off of the main course schedule, and connections among topics can be emphasized by linking key words to related pages of course notes.


Monitoring student progress

When students are given assignments to contribute new material to the wiki, instructors can monitor student progress in real time, foresee potential problems in time to offer corrections, and have access to a full history of team member contributions to support individualized feedback and grading of team projects. This is particularly useful for team-based courses or projects: Students can be asked to submit team reports as wiki pages, and the instructor is able to monitor contributions to the page in real time while retaining a full history of individual student contributions to support fair individual grading of team projects.


Scheduling and team formation

The wiki also supports efficient scheduling and team formation activities. For example, if it is necessary to schedule an activity outside of class time (such as selecting office hours that work best for most students), the instructor can post a table of alternative times, and each student can add an entry to the table to specify her availability or preference. Management of such a setup is far easier and more transparent than receiving email from students. Additionally, team formation for course projects is facilitated by giving the students a space to post comments, ideas, project interests, and questions. The instructor can also create a first-come-first-serve team creation space by allowing students to self organize and declare team and project selection preferences on the wiki.

Student interaction

The active learning experience that a wiki offers to students is its strongest feature. We will illustrate this feature through discussion of three courses in which we have used wikis: an undergraduate project-based course in design, a graduate course in small-scale heat transfer, and a graduate course in quantitative modeling for product development.

Undergraduate project-based course experience

In the mechanical engineering senior capstone design course at Carnegie Mellon, students used the wiki in teams to collaboratively write several design project reports, including pictures and videos to document use and functionality. The course website, available at http://ddl.me.cmu.edu/ddwiki/index.php/ED2, contains links to notes on many of the course topics as well as a history of prior student design reports that new students can use as references.

Figure 1: Screen shot of student team list from the wiki
Figure 1: Screen shot of student team list from the wiki

The course involved a design project that began by students forming teams and selecting a mechanical system of interest to dissect and study. Following in-class activities, students formed teams based on member skills, diversity, and project interests. The wiki facilitated team formation by allowing students to find others with similar interests and form teams. Figure 1 shows a screen shot of the teams that formed.

Because all teams have access to the work of all other teams as well as student reports from prior semesters, students can use these references to benchmark the quality of their work and search for ideas to improve their work. Such a setup would not be appropriate for most engineering courses where all students are solving identical problem sets. However, this feature provides an excellent supportive learning experience for creative courses where each student or each team is creating a unique project: By learning from one another and learning to utilize references, students are encouraged to engage in lifelong learning. Additionally, many students respond to peer pressure of knowing that their work is accessible to others beside the instructor, and they work to create something of which they can be proud. Finally, because the reports are in the public domain, students can choose to provide links to potential employers to showcase their work.

Figure 2: Screen shot of an example student report
Figure 2: Screen shot of an example student report

After forming teams and selecting a mechanical system, each team dissected it's system, studied it from several perspectives, and wrote a report on the product. Figure 2 shows an example of a student report. Because the instructor has access to the reports at all times during student editing, it is possible to catch misunderstandings and errors prior to official submission and make clarifications for the entire class.

Figure 3: Screen shot of an example of feedback on a student report
Figure 3: Screen shot of an example of feedback on a student report

After submitting the report, Professor Michalek used the "talk" page of each report to provide feedback and ask for clarification and additional information. Student teams then responded to this feedback by editing the report and responding point-by-point to each comment. Figure 3 shows an example of this feedback. This feature enabled meaningful interaction and improvement for each team on an open-ended project assignment, and it initiated a dialogue between student teams and the instructor.

After revising the product-analysis report, students went through a process of identifying an unmet need associated with the product, and each team either redesigned the existing product or designed an entirely new product to address the unmet need. Because of the innovative component, many teams chose to submit subsequent reports on their product ideas privately instead of on the wiki, since wiki posting of ideas may constitute public disclosure with respect to intellectual property claims. Some teams chose to submit reports on their new product design via the wiki anyway because of its advantages in supporting collaborative writing - maintaining contribution histories, providing version control, and even allowing multiple team members to edit different sections of the report simultaneously.

Additionally, students were asked to post comments critiquing the work of other teams. This could have been accomplished by asking students to post to the "talk" page of each report; however, in this case a separate bulletin board external to the wiki was used because discussion revolved around in-class prototype demonstrations as opposed to documented wiki content.

Peer-to-peer interaction

Student-instructor interaction

Contribution history

Community-building

Information growth, consolidation and sharing

Graduate course experience in collaborative writing

Professor McGaughey's Small-Scale Heat Transfer (SSHT) course, taught in the winter semester of 2007, had and enrollment of ten graduate students. In the first lecture, students were broken into three groups and asked to write down what they knew about conduction, convection, or radiation on the board. After 5 minutes, the groups rotated and were asked to edit what another group had written. We then had a class discussion on how what they had done was like how a wiki page operates.

The first wiki assignment, presented on the wiki, was as follows:

Task 1: First Page Due: March 27, 2007, Value: 10 points

In the first class we discussed the concepts of

  1. Conduction
  2. Convection
  3. Radiation
  4. Solid
  5. Liquid
  6. Gas
  7. Vapor
  8. Phonon
  9. Photon
  10. Fluid Particle
  11. McGaughey: Electron

There are ten terms and ten students in the class. You have a number assigned to you in class. You are responsible for making a wiki page on the corresponding topic by the due date (start by clicking on the link above). Add your name to the number above, as I have done for electron. Include introductory information using what we discussed in class, things you learned in other classes, reference books, the internet, etc. Be sure to reference all your sources. The content should be appropriate for an undergraduate mechanical engineering student with some exposure to heat transfer, thermodynamics, and fluid mechanics. Try to include a few equations, some figures, etc. and make links to the other NTPwiki pages. Your grade will be based on both the content and visual appearance of the wiki page.

Using the history feature on the wiki, it is possible to track the creation of each page. In initially constructing their pages, students made between two and 22 modifications. Note that a change is noted every time the user saves the page, if it is every minute or every hour. Some students make many changes by previewing each one before submitting, while others submit changes more frequently. Professor McGaughey then read all the pages and left comments for improvements. The students returned to their page and addressed these points.

The second wiki assignment was as follows:


Task 2: Page Editing Due: April 5, 2007, Value: 10 points

Revise/modify/add to the wiki page corresponding to the second number given to you in class. Include some more advanced information. Make links around words/terms that you feel deserve their own page. Add figures. You should consult with the original author. The final grade for each wiki page will given to both people who worked on it. Also feel free to look at the other pages and offer suggestions on what should be included. McGaughey has already done this, and left comments on the pages.

All students edited a second page. The majority of students, even though it was not required, worked on their original page after it had been edited. A number of students edited pages that they were not assigned to. Professor McGaughey was very pleased with how these two exercises turned out. The quality of the wiki pages was very good and clearly a result of the collaborative writing aspect of their development. There was a also a clear sense of an evolving class identity. The collaborative aspect of the second wiki assignment brought students together both online and in the classroom. The students often discussed their pages before and after class.

Students had a third wiki assignment where they were allowed to choose the topic for a new wiki page. They were encourage to make links with all the other pages.

This collaborative activity developed community within the class, and provided a series of wiki pages that can be used in subsequent teachings of the course at a level suitable to the students.


Graduate course experience in independent research

In the graduate course on optimization and product development, students engaged in independent research on a topic related to the course but beyond what was covered in class, writing a wiki page as a report on the topic and presenting it to the class.

Summary and conclusions

Before being converted to its current format, this paper was initially written on Michalek's wiki.

Use of wikis beyond the classroom. e.g., creating an online research community, information warehouse for a research group (methods, practices)

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Ching-Shin (Norman) Shiau and John Thomas for their work in setting up our wiki servers.

References

  • Park, K.R., and Chao, J.T., (2007) "Wiki as a Teaching Tool," Interdisciplinary Journal of Knowledge and Learning Objects, 3, 57-72. [1]
  • Elgort, I., (2007) "Using wikis as a learning tool in higher education," Proceedings ascilite Singapore 2007. [2]
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