Wikis are an excellent platform for team collaboration,
especially in today's climate of distance learning, transcontinental
collaboration, and busy schedules. Although the new technology may be
challenging to learn and apply for some people, wikis offer many amenities for
collaborative teams, such as document repositories, directories, scheduling
capabilities, and meeting documents. These amenities ensure that all team
members have access to the group's documents and information in one location,
but also allow the user to designate the wiki as a members-only forum to ensure
privacy.
In my opinion there is a lot to learn about
how Writing
for the Web can help increase motivation for writing and help students learn
how to adapt their texts for different audiences, tasks, and purposes. Below
are some of the points that outline the effectiveness of wikis in class;
Focus
on High Level Thinking
Wikis
are becoming a popular tool in learning because they involve high-level
thinking and information skills.
Collaborative
Learning.
Wikis allow learners to participate in a project larger than them. Participants
are able to learn from each other and expand their thinking about a topic by
working as a team. In addition, it's easy to go back and track who, did what,
when.
Inquiry. Wikis involve learners in
asking increasingly sophisticated questions related to their topic. After the
initial excitement about the topic and exploration of essential questions,
learners begin to assimilate new information and draw inferences. This leads to
reflection and additional questions. This recursive process leads to increasing
complex questions, more in-depth analysis, and deeper understandings. These
abstract connections can be made more concrete for learners through the
creation of wikis. Features such as hyperlinks allow contributors to share
their mental linkages among pieces of information.
Information
Organization.
Wikis encourage learners to think about how information can be organized to
maximize understanding. For example, wikis can use alphabetical, chronological,
hierarchical, geographical, or thematic approaches. Some people use outlines or
visual maps (i.e., cluster map, flowchart, and mind map) for organization.
Others design around regional locations, events, characters, key words, genre,
categories, or other ways of thinking about a topic.
The
flexible structure of wikis in particular offers a new format for collaboration.
A number of studies have investigated the impact of wiki use upon student
collaboration during group work in higher education. More specifically, wiki
use has been found to both improve the efficiency of group work and the quality
of interactions between students in a group.
In
addition to the largely positive picture the literature paints of wiki use for
improving collaboration between students (and teachers); there is a good deal
of attention given to the benefits of wikis for students’ writing. First,
writing in a wiki sometimes appears to change the students’ understanding of
themselves as authors.
Arguably,
the role of wikis in encouraging critical thinking and self-reflection sits
well with constructivist theories of learning. Wikis highlight the importance
of shared meanings: ‘the wiki becomes both a tool for choice and action.

Its loud and clear that thru wiki collaborations, members are able participate in projects bigger than them. Thanks John
ReplyDeleteVery informative. Thank you! However Wikis can be annoying when there is little collaboratuon and scattered ideas!
ReplyDelete