24 August 2012

Wikis in Education


Wikis are based on the principle of collaborative learning and making knowledge available for all.  Occasionally, however, it can also be useful to restrict access to certain knowledge to defined groups of people, for example, people in individual courses or even whole schools.  In this way, knowledge can be compiled and stored for current and future use, without the whole world having access to it.
Through such activities, schools or organisations can develop large knowledge pools that can be called up, enhanced and edited by everyone, whilst at the same time networking with other schools and organisations.

The EU project WikiSkills develops and implements a wiki training to teach educators how to make the best use of wikis in education. Through this the project promotes innovative pedagogical approaches to foster digital literacy, as well as social skills, writing skills and critical thinking.

In May 2012 die Berater® held a focus group with trainers in adult education on developing different ways and scenarios for integrating wikis in education (i.e. for project management, for the employees of a company to network and to share knowledge, for team building etc.). die Berater® is also responsible for the exploitation of the project results.

The project aims at :
  • Developing collaborative leadership skills, collective decision making skills, conflict resolution skills, governance skills, etc., whilst contributing to the growth of a learning and working community
  • Improving skills on collaborating with others to edit and develop texts
  • Valorising existing cultural patrimony
  • Acquisition of digital fluency basic knowledge

Collaborative Learning
For trainers to work with wikis, it is essential for them to be able to collaborate well with their students; good exchange between teachers and students is paramount to a successful wiki.

A lot of learning environments are characterized by one-way knowledge transmission processes in which the teacher is seen as the only source of knowledge. The teacher therefore assigns a learning activity that is carried out autonomously by the student.

By working with wikis students and course participants can learn not only how to publish content, but learn to acquire and improve cooperative skills.

What exactly is a wiki?
A wiki is a website whose users can add, modify, or delete its content simply via a web browser. Wikis permit asynchronous communication and group collaboration across the Internet. What separates the wiki from other online, distributed environments, such as Learning Management Systems (LMS) and groupware applications, is its open architecture. The design implies that structure is not imposed or predetermined (as in an LMS) but emerges as a result of participation.

The essence of the wiki concept may be described as follows:
  • A wiki invites all users to edit any page or to create new pages within the wiki website, using only a web browser.
  • A wiki promotes meaningful topic associations between different pages, by making page link creation intuitive and showing whether an intended target page exists or not.
  • A wiki is not a carefully crafted site for casual visitors. Instead, it seeks to involve the visitor in an ongoing process of creation and collaboration that constantly changes the website landscape.

8th WikiSym - International Symposium on Wikis and Open Collaboration
The next WikiSym is held in Linz, from 27th to 29th August. WikiSym is a symposium (conference) series dedicated to wiki and open collaboration research and practice.  This symposium has been a gathering place for those interested in how we can use technologies like Wikis to support, develop, and change collaboration and collective action.

09 August 2012

Schools partner-up to improve international cooperation

 


Collaborations between schools improve cultural awareness, intercultural learning and understanding and introduce international perspective into the classroom.


Teachers acting as international school coordinators around Europe play a crucial in fostering this international perspective and intercultural awareness. Offering trainings for intercultural school coordinators is the main goal of the Multilateral Project 'International Coordination Training for Intercultural Education and Diversity' (ICTPIED), coordinated by the British Council.

The pilot training course took place at Easingwold (UK) in March 2012, the participants came from 7 different EU countries as well as from India, Lebanon and Algeria. This enhanced the intercultural dimension of the course. The next “intercultural training course for the School International Co-ordinator” is now advertised in the Comenius Catalogue online:

Course 1 (Belgium): From Sunday 24 February to Friday 01 March
Course 2 (Romania): From Sunday 14 April to Friday 19 April


(Deadline for both courses: 1st September 2012)

The main objectives of this new training course are to:
  • enable international coordinators in schools to gain intercultural competences
  • demonstrate how intercultural issues can jeopardise school partnerships and to offer practical solutions and ideas during the course
  • develop project management skills with a focus on the intercultural context
  • encourage participants to develop their leadership role in school and to become active disseminators for intercultural education for other staff and students.


The course is the result of the ICTPIED project which involved partners from the UK, Austria, Germany and Romania in constructing and testing all of the activities. This process was supported by over 300 teachers in focus groups.

Methodologies
The course will use a range of methodologies including presentations, group work, role play and open discussion. Participants will receive information on intercultural education, leadership, project management, student perspectives and opinions, and the creative use of school partnerships. One important feature will be the inclusion of a number of intercultural scenarios which feature some of the main issues faced by those who manage international activities in school.

The collaborative forum created for each course will allow participants to keep in touch after the course is over. Course participants will be encouraged to undertake an intercultural task in their own school (modeled on one of the course activities), record their impressions of how this went and share this work with the others.

What defines a good school partnership?

A good partnership …
…is sustainable, not entirely funding led, soundly managed, motivates staff and pupils alike, is supported by senior management, involves the wider school community, is integrated into the curriculum, is strategically planned, addresses global issues and contributes to key competence development of teachers and pupils.

All of these factors were included in the development of the intercultural training course for the School International Coordinators (UK-2013-1676-002).

Teachers and teacher-trainers have the opportunity to apply for a Comenius In-service Training Grant to attend this course.The Comenius website will include full instructions on how to apply for the Comenius grant covering travel, accommodation, meals and course fees. If you are having any problems with this process please email: R.Kirtley@hull.ac.uk

Project website: http://schoolsonline.britishcouncil.org/ictpied