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How to use the Web to teach: An example

Posted on January 25th, 2010

Want to see one way to use the Web to teach? Berkman’s Jonathan Zittrain and Stanford Law’s Elizabeth Stark are teaching a course called Difficult Problems in Cyberlaw. It looks like they have students creating wiki pages for the various topics being discussed. The one on “The Future of Wikipedia” is a terrific resource for exploring the issues Wikipedia is facing.

Among the many things I like about this approach: It implicitly makes the process of learning — which we have traditionally taken as an inward process — a social, outbound process. By learning this way. we are not only enriching ourselves, but enriching our world.

My only criticism: I wish the pages had prominent pointers to a main page that explains that the pages are part of a course.

Tagged with: 2b2k • education • everythingIsMiscellaneous • pedagogy • wikipedia • wikis

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One Response to “How to use the Web to teach: An example”

  1. From the Archives: Jane Jacobs and ‘Fact City’ | Jane's Walk Phoenix, on March 24th, 2010 at 8:14 pm Said:

    [...] How to use the Web to teach: An example (hyperorg.com) [...]

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