Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/Florida International University/Business Ethics (Spring 2017)
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- Course name
- Business Ethics
- Institution
- Florida International University
- Instructor
- Karen Paul
- Wikipedia Expert
- Shalor (Wiki Ed)
- Subject
- Business Ethics
- Course dates
- 2017-01-09 00:00:00 UTC – 2017-04-29 23:59:59 UTC
- Approximate number of student editors
- 70
Timeline
Week 1
- Course meetings
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- Sunday, 22 January 2017
- In class - Introduction to the Wikipedia project
Welcome to your Wikipedia project's course timeline. This page will guide you through the Wikipedia project for your course. Be sure to check with your instructor to see if there are other pages you should be following as well.
Your course has also been assigned a Wikipedia Content Expert. Check your Talk page for notes from them. You can also reach them through the "Get Help" button on this page.
To get started, please review the following handouts:
- Editing Wikipedia pages 1–5
- Evaluating Wikipedia
- Assignment - Create your account & take all assigned trainings
- Create an account and join this course page, using the enrollment link your instructor sent you.
- It's time to dive into Wikipedia. Below, you'll find the first set of online trainings you'll need to take. New modules will appear on this timeline as you get to new milestones. Be sure to check back and complete them! Incomplete trainings will be reflected in your grade.
- When you finish the trainings, practice by introducing yourself to a classmate on that classmate’s Talk page.
- Read through the rest of the Editing Wikipedia guidebook.
- Assignment - Choose an article
- Review page 6 of your Editing Wikipedia guidebook.
- If you want to do the translation assignment, choose two articles (a first choice, and a backup) to translate into English. Post the article links in your sandbox, and submit them to the instructor for review.
- If you want to make a regular, non-translation edit, pick any article on Wikipedia related to the course. Consider browsing the Category:Business ethics article list for ideas.
- Once your instructor has approved one or both of your choices, finalize your choice of which article to translate or improve. Make sure you head to the Students tab above and assign yourself your chosen article topic.
Week 2
- Course meetings
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- Sunday, 29 January 2017
- Assignment - Add to an article assignment
If you pick this project, it's due by Feb 18th.
Familiarize yourself with editing Wikipedia by adding a citation or adding new content to the article you selected. Take all the assigned training modules before you start. Make sure you read through the article before you make your edit and consider what kinds of changes you could make that would help improve the article.
Your changes might include:
- Removing old links or dead links from the reference section;
- Adding new citations;
- Re-writing a section that is particularly poorly written or hard to understand;
- Adding 2-5 new sentences of content, backed up with a citation, to an area that could use improvement.
You can use your sandbox to draft your work or brainstorm ideas. It's also a good place to play with formatting. Once you've thought about what you might change, and if you feel comfortable and confident, go ahead and move your idea(s) "live"!
Editing an existing article?
- NEVER copy and paste your draft of an article over the entire article. Instead, edit small sections at a time.
- Copy your edits into the article. Make sure you are in the "Edit" or "edit source" view when copying AND when pasting your content. Make many small edits, saving each time, and leaving an edit summary. Never replace more than one to two sentences without saving!
- Read Editing Wikipedia page 12 to see how to create links from your article to others, and from other articles to your own. Make sure there are links to 3–5 other articles, and links to your article from 2–3 other articles on Wikipedia.
Handout: Moving out of your sandbox
- Assignment - Translation assignment
If you pick this project, it's due by Feb 18th.
To start:
- Take the necessary assigned training modules.
- Copy your article from the target-language Wikipedia into your sandbox.
- Begin to translate your work.
- Introduce citations from English-language texts that support the facts stated in your translated article. Adjust your translation if necessary.
- For each sentence you translate, make a note of the sources used in the original article. Are they good sources? Do they really say what the Wikipedia article describes?
When you're ready to move your work live:
- Move your sandbox draft into main space.
- If you are expanding an existing article, it's time to add your revised translation (including English sources, when available). Copy your edit into the article. If you are making many small edits, save after each edit before you make the next one. Do NOT paste over the entire existing article, or large sections of the existing article. Be sure to check the article's talk page and respond to suggestions from Wikipedians. Don't panic if your edits are removed or changed! Discuss it civilly on the article's talk page, and make a note of it for your report or presentation about your editing experience.
- If you are creating a new article, do NOT copy and paste your text, or there will be no record of your work history. Follow instruction on the "Moving out of your sandbox" handout.
- In your first edit to the article namespace, include a link of the source article (i.e., the article you translated) in the "edit summary" before hitting "save."
- Copy the code
to the bottom of the Wikipedia article, replacing es with the language code of the language you a translating from and replacing Page Title with the title of the source page.This page contains a translation of Page Title from es.wikipedia.
Handout: Moving out of your sandbox