2023:Program/Poster sessions/UZEJAQ-A Baker's Dozen Years of Peeragogy and Wikimedia + What's Next
Title: A Baker's Dozen Years of Peeragogy and Wikimedia + What's Next
Speakers:
Charlie
I am the owner of Mr. Danoff’s Teaching Laboratory. I have a background in education and analysis. More importantly, I think Wikipedia and the Wikimedia projects are one of the most beautiful, amazing things humans have ever made.
Joseph Corneli
I completed my doctorate on peer learning and peer production at the Knowledge Media Institute, part of the The Open University, UK. I then held postdoctoral research roles in computing and informatics, and made innovative contributions to teaching data science to design students. I am presently based at Oxford Brookes University, working on a large consortium project about Open Research. I am also the director of Hyperreal Enterprises, Ltd., which does transdisciplinary R&D.
Room: Expo Space
Start time: Thu, 17 Aug 2023 17:12:00 +0800
End time: Thu, 17 Aug 2023 17:14:00 +0800
Type: Poster session
Track: No (pretalx) track id specified
Submission state: confirmed
Duration: 2 minutes
Do not record: false
Presentation language: en
Abstract & description
[edit source]Abstract
[edit source]Poster Category: Education Session Time: 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM in Singapore
We call our research into peer learning and peer production “peeragogy”. It started at Wikimania 2010 followed by a Wikiversity paper the next year. This poster highlights the Wikibooks, peer reviewed papers, and translations finished since plus invites attendees to give suggestions on what we should do next.
Description
[edit source]Following a chance encounter at Wikimania 2010 in Gdańsk, our research into peer learning and peer production, that we call peeragogy, formally started in 2011 with a paper we submitted to a conference and published on Wikiversity. Since then we have written more papers (some of which were accepted for conferences and peer reviewed publications), published multiple books, been cited by researchers around the globe, and shared ideas we believe have helped humans learn plus produce things better. Throughout this journey we have been enormously lucky to use different Wikimedia projects, present at an Wikimania 2015, and have our work translated into different languages. We are enormously indebted to Wikimedians around the world and would like to use this talk to recap what we have done and get input from attendees on where we should go next. In addition it is a formal invitation for peers to join us and contribute to the upcoming fourth edition of our Handbook.
Further details
[edit source]Qn. How does your session relate to the event themes: Diversity, Collaboration Future?
Our work in peeragogy is centered on collaboration. If people want to do things themselves, they do not need to work with peers. Additionally from the start we have embraced and encouraged peers from diverse backgrounds to join to give us a richer group to produce our books. I hope this poster encourages attendees to join us in co-producing the upcoming 4th edition of our handbook plus improving our understanding of peeragogy for future generations.
Qn. What is the experience level needed for the audience for your session?
Everyone can participate in this session
Qn. What is the most appropriate format for this session?