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1 Timeline  



1.1  Week 1  





1.2  Week 2  





1.3  Week 3  





1.4  Week 4  





1.5  Week 5  
















Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/Texas AM/Technical Editing (Spring 2019)







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

< Wikipedia:Wiki Ed

Course name
Technical Editing
Institution
Texas AM
Instructor
Joshua DiCaglio
Wikipedia Expert
Shalor (Wiki Ed)
Subject
Editing, Technical Communication
Course dates
2019-02-13 00:00:00 UTC – 2019-05-03 23:59:59 UTC
Approximate number of student editors
25


This is an applied course meant to prepare students to function as an editor in technical and professional venues. We will use Wikipedia to target certain less-tangible skills necessary for advanced editing: the ability to join a community of editors that already have standards in place, learn to read and improve writing within those conventions, and learn to facilitate good writing within this existing community. Rather than simply copyediting existing articles, creating new articles, or adding new content to existing articles, the students will focus on finding articles that have a good base of content but which need editorial intervention to help the larger community of potential editors continue to improve the articles. Students will focus primarily on issues of organization, appropriateness, and Wikipedia style, with the aim of significantly improving the existing content of an article. Students will be expected to work within the Wikipedia infrastructure, including engaging with current interested editors and leaving traces of their work to assist with future editing of the articles they worked on.

Student Assigned Reviewing
UnfoldingWords Ice circle, Bassoon
MilliGrams Centaur, Sleeping beauty
Jordankelseyh Fall of the Fascist regime in Italy, 2008 Coca-Cola 600
Srob21 Jazz Age, St John's College, Johannesburg
Slaurensk 1919 Actors' Equity Association strike, Desilo
Paigebrazil National Museum (Prague), Dairy product
Ands1234 Gender in horror films, Havanese dog, Tattoo artist
Kayla Andr. Dress code, Oboe
Candles and candy Public speaking, Clueless (film)
Aggiegal19 The Little Mermaid, Afternoon of a Faun (Nijinsky)
Jhc2675 Record label, Single (music)
Camrynbl Chinese folklore, Sophist
Bah2019 Blue cheese, Fashion week
Lostxxjustina DIY ethic, Fruitarianism
TWJohn Comic timing, Darts
Sisypheantasks Blood Meridian, 12 Years a Slave (score)
Uniquajanae Save the Plastic Bag Coalition v. City of Manhattan Beach, Aerobic exercise
Jmmonty16 Cowboy hat, La Croix
Saraiediting Fire Sea, Feminism in Latin America
Rmj17 Hobby, Meadow
Allonsyalyssa Comedy film, Achievement Hunter
Atampir StarKid Productions, Bandstand (musical)
KaitTip One Tree Hill (TV series), Clueless (TV series)
NZMKZ Rowing, Cats in ancient Egypt
Audentis.Fortuna.Iuvat Ghost hunting, Prehistoric music

Timeline

Week 1

Course meetings
Wednesday, 13 February 2019   |   Friday, 15 February 2019

In class - Introduction to the Wikipedia project

Welcome to your Wikipedia project's course timeline. This page will guide you through the Wikipedia project for your course. We will be using a combination of in class and online instruction as we interface with the Wikipedia community. 

Wikipedia offers us the chance to practice editing in an applied context, within an existing culture, and in an online setting. Although anyone can edit Wikipedia, the actual process of becoming a regular contributor requires a little bit of work and, in many ways, mimics the learning curve of editing professionally. Just like any business or organization, Wikipedia editors have developed elaborate protocols for ensuring the quality of edits, standards of articles, and cohesion across entries.  Just like any quality online publication, Wikipedia has its own standards for web-publication and even its own markup language, which is a modified version of HTML. Just like any community-based editing, there are sometimes unusual conventions for feedback, cross-checking, and communication as well as an editng culture that reflects the history and ethos of the project. Thus, while anyone can edit, there is still an environment that echoes some essential aspects of editing in workplace settings.  We can thus use Wikipedia to perform our own practice of editing in context. 


This course has also been assigned a Wikipedia Expert. Check your Talk page for notes from them. You can also reach them through the "Get Help" button on this page. 

Assignment - Wikipedia Basics

For this first week, we'll need to get you set up on Wikipedia. 

In class - Wikipedia's Editing Culture

Our task is to think critically about Wikipedia articles so that we can learn to improve the existing content and facilitate future editing. To do so, the first task will be to learn to identify what Wikipedia articles look like and what makes a good one. Then we'll work on finding our own to help improve and make into better ones. 

Guidelines and Policies - We want to get a feel for Wikipedia as a living community that nonetheless has developed elaborate rules for itself. These standards are articulated through information pages and supplementary essays as well as brochures produced by the Wikimedia foundation. Below are some useful articles on the basic philosophy and structure of Wikipedia. Using these as a starting point (but following links as needed (you'll quickly see through repetition what Wikipedia editors value and emphasize), spend a few hours getting familiar with the editorial priorities and process used by Wikipedia. 

Be prepared to discuss in class. 

Milestones

Everyone has signed up for a Wikipedia account and familiarized themselves with Wikipedia's editing culture.

Week 2

Course meetings
Monday, 18 February 2019   |   Wednesday, 20 February 2019   |   Friday, 22 February 2019

Assignment - Good Articles vs. Needs Improvement

Wikipedia has a nomination and review process to designate "Good articles". We can use these to get a better feel for what a good article looks like so that we can learn how to recognize an article that needs improvement.

Likewise, Wikipedia has a process for nominating articles that need for improvement. 

For two of these articles, write up a bullet-point list summarizing why you think this article was nominated for the "needs improvement" designation.

Assignment - Practice Edits

As you were looking through the articles that need improvement, you probably found a few small problems that can be easily fixed. To practice editing, go ahead and make at least two changes to these (or any other) articles.  A few things to note as you do:

Assignment - Choosing Articles to Work on

Use the training module below to get you thinking about how to select an article, but we need to add some more parameters. To accomplish the kind of editing we want for this assignment, we need a particular kind of article. 

With these in mind, pick 5 articles and post them to your user page in the order you would prefer. We'll ultimately work on 2 but we want to have a third on hand in case one of the first two don't work. 

Once they are approved, I will assign you the articles in the student tab. 

In class - Getting to a Better Article

Our goal is to help our articles on their way to "Good article" status. Even if we don't fully accomplish this task, our intervention should lay the groundwork for future editors, especially those knowledgeable about the content, to bring the article to this level.  There are a few pages in place to help us see how to do so:

Familiarize yourself with the above articles, paying particular attention to the guidelines provides for elements you noticed when we were examining articles earlier this week. At this point you should be getting a much better sense of the task that is ahead of you. Return to these articles as needed throughout the rest of the assignment. 

Milestones

Everyone has been assigned articles

Assignment - Comprehensive Assessment of your Articles

Now that you have your articles assigned and a basic sense of the Wikipedia guidelines, let's dig deeper into your articles. Do the following for each article:

1Audience, Purpose, Expertise -- For each article, think carefully about the following:

2) Examine the history of your article: Go to the history page and scroll through the edits. Take note of:

3) Your article in context -- all articles are connected into larger projects and communities and will have at least some history of interaction. The following will help you immensely in getting a feel for your article:

4) Summarize what you've found. Post the following to your userpage:

5Interface with Wikipedia community. Your article may or may not be currently watched by editors who have worked on it previously. We want to make sure that we engage with the existing community and leave enough space for interaction.  Remember, interaction is what makes Wikipedia thrive!  You do not get to claim the article and cannot put it on hold while you work on it--others  might work on it as well and your edits might even be undone or altered.  But there are a few things we can do to let other editors know that you're working on it. Do the following as necessary and fitting for your articles (you decide--gauge what and who is there and don't be afraid to make mistakes!)

 

Week 3

Course meetings
Monday, 25 February 2019   |   Wednesday, 27 February 2019   |   Friday, 1 March 2019

In class - Get to Work

Now your ready to begin working! As you work, feel free to post edits as you go or to work on sections in your sandbox. Wikipedia records all edits so I'll be able to trace your progress as you go and see how much and what you changed. Remember, we're aiming for significant improvement but this won't happen all at once. In fact, to ensure proper integration into the Wikipedia community, you shouldn't post all changes at once but post as you go. 

 

In class - Major Issue #1
Organization and Leads

While many articles are initially put together by a single author, many are patched together often over years of edits by many different writers. Often, structural decisions made years ago will be left in place and thereby frame future edits. Meanwhile, content may be added into random places or just tacked on the end. Thus, the first place to start with any article is thinking about organization. 

Guideline pages to consult:

Assess your articles

Note that if you are making major changes to the organization, you might want to let the Wikipedia community know first and give a clear rationale for it in the talk page. These are often the most bold edits since they can rearrange a whole article. Don't be afraid to do it but make sure that you're clear about why and be open to push-back. 

Assignment - Major Issue #2
Content-focus Problems

Many problems that arise in Wikipedia come from how the article is focused--what information is focused on and how might it be skewed towards one perspective?  Because those who are invested in a topic are likely to be the ones who contribute significant content, some work usually has to be done to adjust the article to ensure that it is balanced and focused properly. 

Here are the three primary guidelines about content:

Assess your articles:

Make changes as you find them. 

Milestones

Every student has listed their tasks to be completed and begun work on organization and content-focus problems. 


Week 4

Course meetings
Monday, 4 March 2019   |   Wednesday, 6 March 2019   |   Friday, 8 March 2019

Assignment - Major Issue #3
Style, Tone, and Clarity

Wikipedia is supposed to sound like an encyclopedia. This ideal of a clear, informative, and neutral tone can be hard to achieve, but a good editor can usually spot when the style is NOT these things.  Now that you have examined the content and organization closely, it is time to look carefully at the sentences and make improvements. 

A warning: one can endlessly re-craft sentences and so Wikipedia editors tend to discourage excessive or minor fiddling with sentences. Focus primarily on substantial and needed improvements. When you make a change, try to indicate why the edit was needed citing the relevant policy page if possible (e.g. "Rephrase to conform to WP:NPOV")

Guidelines for tone and clarity

Read carefully through your article, keeping a close eye out for:

Make changes as you find them. 


Assignment - Polishing your articles
Final steps

Before we finish, three final steps are necessary to ensure that your article is in good shape both now and for future editing. Remember, the goal here is not necessarily a polished and finished article--although if you end up with one, great! Rather there are things we can do even with an article that still needs work to help future editors get the article there.

1) Copyedit - Take one final pass through the article looking carefully for grammar, usage, and formatting issues. Where necessary consult the Wikipedia Manual of Style.  (Please note that when two uses are equally acceptable, you don't change it. For example, if there is a British spelling don't change it to the American spelling.  A more complete list of such problems can be found here.)

2) Polishing and formatting infoboxes, links, categories, references, and images - Review the standards provided at the following locations:

3) Template messages and community notification: your article is not going to be perfect by the end of this project. Perhaps the article needs more content, perhaps it needs better sources, perhaps the article might need a more significant change such as merging, splitting, significant rewriting that is beyond your current capacity, or even deleting. In any of these cases, this is not a problem. Instead, you can do the following to engage current a future editors in the continuing process of developing the article.


Read Editing Wikipedia page 15 to review a final check-list before completing your assignment.

Milestones

Significant improvements have been made to the articles.

Week 5

Course meetings
Monday, 18 March 2019

Assignment - Summary and Reflection

To assist with evaluation, please send me an email (this email will also signal to me that you are finished and your edits ready to be examined) containing a written summary of your time working with Wikipedia as well as a reflection on the process. Please include information about:

 

Milestones

Everyone should have finished all of the work they'll do on Wikipedia, and be ready for grading.


Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:Wiki_Ed/Texas_AM/Technical_Editing_(Spring_2019)&oldid=885855114"

Categories: 
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Dashboard.wikiedu.org courses, Texas A&M University
 



This page was last edited on 2 March 2019, at 19:48 (UTC).

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