1) Do you have any concerns about the quality of educational
resources developed using an open authoring approach? If so, what are
your concerns? If not, how does an open authoring approach contribute
to high quality learning materials?
A resounding yes. Material and resources are only as good (and
reliable) as the authors who write them. Having said that, I have the
same concerns over educational resources that can be purchased in any
college bookstore. Educational resources are heavily biased and often
contain erroneous information. The saving grace for textbooks is that
they can change between lesson plans. I cannot imagine trying to
teach from course materials that were fluidly changing throughout the
course. Exactly how do you develop a syllabus based on this? You
can't - at least not one that your university would accept. With a
textbook, you can preview it at your leisure, highlight erroneous or
biased sections, and supplement as necessary. For highly biased
materials - you can write the author, drop the book from your course,
and choose suitable replacement. It seems that wikis, if used
appropriately, could be used to supplement the bias nature of
textbooks to provide a well rounded view. The textbook could remain
the main resource with a supplemental wiki that would provide
alternate views, examples, ideas, etc that may broaden the educational
scope of the student and provide lively classroom debate. Although
some have stated that they are confident of the self-authoring
protection from biased and inappropriate material, that too, is only
as good as the editors and the time they are willing to commit to
maintaining the integrity of the site. Along the same lines, highly
biased wikis can also become self-fulfilling if the authors are
staunch enough in their belief and will simply edit to maintain their
bias. There is no such thing as free speech, free press, and
definitely not a free media where every voice will be heard.
Therefore, the democratic ideals of a wiki are delusional.
2) In your opinion, should course development for education use
closed or open authoring approaches? Give reasons for your view?
I think I answered this in the above rant. But as a summary statement
I will add that the decision should remain with the faculty member
teaching the course. Academic freedom for course instructors is one
of the few freedoms that faculty have left. Personally, I would only
use a wiki as supplemental material or base material from which to
build a course from scratch.
3) What mechanisms can be adopted to assure quality of educational
content developed in Wiki environments?
Only a high degree of monitoring by the faculty responsible for the
course can provide any level of assurance. Even this level is
deceptive at best. To expect the wiki contributors to ensure high
quality assurance is a poor expectation for freely contributed work
and a high expectation on individual time required to do so. To
expect any staff involvement from the school to ensure monitoring/
examination of all course materials is too broad and unmanageable for
the most highly staffed university. Universities must place some
degree of trust in their faculty to ensure that the educational
materials provided are of sound judgment. However, many faculty have
previously broken this trust due to laziness and ineptitude which has
led academic management to pursue a more dictatorial view of course
development. This lessens the creativity for those who are so
inclined to provide an "out-of-the-box" experience for their
students. Even so, many universities are slowly going to pre-
designated course materials (or more commonly known as canned
courses). This movement is a result of poorly managed courses by
faculty members. The result is a higher demand upon course
development/management and less academic freedom for individual course
instructors. It also propagates institutional thinking among students
instead of free thinking. Instead of management getting involved in
supervising and approving course documents, they should spend more
time hiring the right faculty members for their program (and yes, this
is an entire discussion in itself).
>
http://www.wikieducator.org/Wikieducator_tutorial/What_is_a_wiki/Adva...