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8/24/2006
By Terry Calhoun
Very recently, I was able to find a “political” use for Wikipedia that feels empowering.
In the event that you do not know, Wikipedia is a Wiki-based “encyclopedia” that allows Web documents to be served up and then edited by anyone who has access to the document. Working the bugs out has been interesting, and the site has its detractors, but I believe that at this moment in time there is no better place to go to learn the basics of a subject new to you.
Below, I will share two new Wikipedia articles I have begun to work on, along with my request that you go there and contribute to them as well. I have created a Wikipedia article on Higher Education Computing. Just a very basic one that anyone can go and enhance!
I have also created a Wikipedia article about the events at the beginning of the school year of 2003, which we all suffered through. You can enhance that so-far-very-simple article here: Higher Education’s 2003 “Perfect Storm” of Returning Students with Viruses and Worms.
And I will repeat a warning from an earlier article. Nearly every college and university has a Wikipedia entry, and every college and university needs to have a staff person assigned to watching their entries for accuracy. When anyone can write anything, some nasty things can and do get written. Vigilance is called for.
Two political “articles” (not the ones that I am asking you to contribute to) that I am watching like a hawk are the American Medical Association (AMA) and J'e Schwarz, congressman, (R-MI).
Just a couple of weeks ago, J'e Schwarz, a “moderate” candidate, was under attack for being too liberal by a right-wing competitor. I just happen to live in Schwartz’s district and was appalled when I received a scurrilous campaign postcard on behalf of Schwarz, mailed and paid for by the AMA. Note: Schwarz is an MD.
The postcard came at a tight time in the race and could not have been better designed to appeal to Schwarz’s need to seem more right wing than he really is. Picture this over-sized full-color postcard.
Side A: Image of grieving mother of dead soldier on the right, being handed a folded American flag by a senior officer. Alongside it is an image of a “demonstrator” holding two signs that read: “Thank God for Maimed Soldiers” and “America Is Doomed.” Below that is language that says something like, “J'e Schwarz believes that dead soldiers’ families deserve respect.”
A clear sign that online and distance learning is maturing is that we are struggling with how to organize and fund these programs on an ongoing basis.
Can auxiliary services be mission-critical? You bet they can. With tuition on the rise, Auxiliary Services departments at a variety of colleges and universities are proving that they can innovate and still save their parent institutions cash.
Commercials on television tend to enrage me and laugh tracks are guaranteed to give me a headache. Plus, where do people find the time to watch TV?
Among many themes, Margaret Price explores the theme of purpose in her Viewpoint. One purpose of ePortfolio is to reflect on change from a beginning to a later point in time. In a future Viewpoint, Margaret will return to the SpEl.Folio and we’ll see how her thinking and her project have evolved.
If you’re not also enabling the ‘why’ or ‘what’ behind the tech tools you give your faculty, you’re not enabling effective use of those tools.
Until last week, it hadn’t "clicked" inside my head that the Library of Congress could or would make specific exemptions to copyright laws.