Challenge #8 Collaborate and
Communicate
This week I was challenged to create and participate in a
Wiki. I choose to use my Wiki to discuss how a Wiki can be used in an
elementary classroom. I am a lower elementary teacher so I asked the
participants in my Wiki to discuss how to use a Wiki in the lower elementary
grades. The link for my personal Wiki is below.
This particular challenge was tough for me. I had a lot of technical difficulties using
the Wikispace website. For starters, I had my Wiki set on private and thought I
had turned it to public but didn’t. I finally realized my error. But my good
friends in the class contributed to my Wiki and alerted me to my mistake.
Links:
http://sablackburn.wikispaces.com/
My Wiki.
Wikis I collaborated on:
Challenge Discussion:
What is the
difference between cooperation and collaboration?
I think of the
words cooperation and collaboration as synonyms. According to the Dictionary App on my phone, collaborate means
to work with another and cooperation means to work together for a common goal
or action. But after completing the Wiki challenge, I realized that they are
actually very different.
In the context of the Wiki project, it seemed like the Wiki
participants were only collaborating. We weren’t working together to complete
one final and united project. We were simply adding our thoughts to a Wiki
space. It didn’t matter if the information we were contributing matched or complimented
another person’s entry. We were all just adding opinions or facts to the discussion
on the Wiki.
Wiki Project vs.
Traditional Group Work
The one big difference I noticed between the Wiki project
and traditional group work was that there was no immediate feedback from my
peers. There also didn’t seem to be much of a conversation about the topic we
were discussing in our Wiki’s. It felt like we were all just posting facts and
opinions and not really discussing topics. As a student, I find the
conversation part of learning to be invaluable. Listening to other people’s
thoughts on topics helps me to process new information. I found that the Wiki
didn’t really allow for that aspect of the learning process to occur.
How can collaboration
be taught?
Before collaboration can be taught, the teacher needs to
teach students how to use the tools that are used for collaboration. Teachers
cannot expect students to collaborate if they don’t know how to use Wikis,
blogs, or social media. Once students have learned how to use collaboration
tools, teachers can begin to create an online learning community within their
own classroom. The online learning community, within their classroom, allows
students to practice collaborating on projects with their peers. By starting at
the classroom level, students are able to get feedback face to face from their
peers about their ability to collaborate. When the teacher feels that the
students have learned to collaborate at the classroom level, than they can
begin to collaborate with others on a local or global level.
Challenge #9 Assess
To
assess the participants in my Wiki I used the Rubric that was included with our
book. I found the Rubric in the PD tool kit. This challenge also required us to
record our assessment discussion on the multimedia of our choice. I decided to
record my discussion on You Tube. The link to my discussion is below.
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