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Encyclopedia > Wikiversity
Wikiversity logo
Wikiversity logo

Wikiversity is a Wikimedia Foundation beta project[1], devoted to learning materials and activities, located at www.wikiversity.org. Wikiversity's beta phase officially began on August 15th, 2006 with the English language Wikiversity. There are currently four language Wikiversities - English, French, German, and Spanish - and new language Wikiversity projects in other languages are in development at the "beta" multilingual hub. Image File history File links Wikiversity-logo-Snorky. ... Image File history File links Wikiversity-logo-Snorky. ... The Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. ... Software development stages In computer programming, development stage terminology expresses how the development of a piece of software has progressed and how much further development it may require. ...

Contents

Project details

Wikiversity is in development as a center for the creation and use of free learning materials, and the provision of learning activities. Its primary priorities and goals are to:

  • Create and host a range of free-content, multilingual learning materials/resources, for all age groups in all languages
  • Host scholarly/learning projects and communities that support these materials[2]

The Wikiversity e-Learning model places emphasis on "learning groups" and "learning by doing"[3][4]. The idea is that these groups/communities of Wikiversity participants engage in scholarly learning projects, and that learning is through collaboration on projects that involve editing Wikiversity pages. Wikiversity learning projects consist of collections of wiki webpages concerned with the scholarly exploration of a particular topic[5]. Wikiversity participants can (and do) express their learning goals and the Wikiversity community collaborates to develop learning activities and projects to accommodate those goals. Look up Wiki in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...


Learning resources are developed by individuals or groups, either on their own initiative, or as part of a learning project. Wikiversity resources include teaching aids, lesson plans, curricula, links to off-site resources, and reading lists - but do not include textbooks, which are developed at Wikibooks[6]. Learning groups with interests in each subject area create a web of resources that form the basis of discussions and activities at Wikiversity. Learning resources can be used by educators outside of Wikiversity for their own purposes, under the terms of the GFDL (like Wikipedia). Wikibooks logo Wikibooks, previously called Wikimedia Free Textbook Project and Wikimedia-Textbooks, is a wiki for the creation of books. ... GFDL redirects here. ...


In order to move out of its "beta" phase, a goal for the Wikiversity community during the six month beta phase is the creation of policies governing research activities. Wikiversity may act as a repository of research carried out by the Wikimedia Research Network, or others who are involved in wiki-based, or other research. Whether or not Wikiversity will ever host original research in addition to secondary research is the subject of debate, and guidelines for what would be appropriate research will be developed during the beta phase of the project through a community consensus process[7][8].


History

Wikiversity was originally started at Wikibooks in 2003. In 2005, a formal proposal[9] to start Wikiversity as an independent project was voted on.[10] The Wikiversity project was discussed at the November 2005 Wikimedia Board meeting.[11] The Wikimedia Foundation Board of Trustees requested that some changes be made before the project would start at its own website. The Modified project proposal was approved by the Board. By the time it was approved, 17 language portals had been developed on Wikibooks.


References

  1. ^ Welcome speech, Jimbo Wales, Wikimania 2006 (audio)
  2. ^ Approved Wikiversity project proposal, Wikiversity
  3. ^ Wikiversity:Learning, Wikiversity
  4. ^ Wikiversity learning model, Wikiversity
  5. ^ Wikiversity learning projects portal, Wikiversity
  6. ^ Wikiversity:What Wikiversity is not, Wikiversity
  7. ^ Scope of research on Wikiversity (in development), Multingual Wikiversity hub
  8. ^ Wikiversity research guidelines (in development), Multilingual Wikiversity hub
  9. ^ Wikimedia Meta-Wiki: Original Wikiversity proposal (not approved)
  10. ^ Wikimedia Meta-Wiki: Wikiversity Vote
  11. ^ Wikimedia Meta-Wiki: Board agenda for the Wikimedia Foundation

External links


  Results from FactBites:
 
Wikiversity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (492 words)
Wikiversity's beta phase officially began on August 15th, 2006 with the English language Wikiversity.
Wikiversity participants express their learning goals and the Wikiversity community collaborates to develop learning activities and projects to accommodate those goals.
Wikiversity could act as a repository of research carried out by the Wikimedia Research Network or others who are involved in wiki-based research.
Wikipedia:Wikipedia Signpost/2006-08-07/Wikiversity - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (291 words)
Wikiversity was approved by 69.8% of voters in November 2005, reaching the two-thirds majority required to submit the proposal to the Wikimedia board.
Wikiversity would contain materials useful for learning that do not fit into Wikibooks' specific area (textbooks).
Very little information is yet known about how Wikiversity will be launched, and exactly when the launch would occur, but many of the details are being worked on the meta-wiki.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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