User:ProfGray/Exercise wife-sister edits
Wikipedia Assignment 2b: Introductory edits on wife-sister narratives
Due: Week 4-5 2015
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Goals and principles (You can skip this)
[edit]Learning outcomes
[edit]See: User:ProfGray/ExerciseIntroEdit. This exercise focuses on facility with reading (or skimming) and utilizing academic articles for brief WP edits.
Principles behind the assigned steps
[edit]The assigned procedure is built upon the following principles:
- Talk to people. Raise questions or proposing improvements before editing on Talk pages. (Though other approached can work, too. Wikipedia runs more smoothly when people chat about a topic and develop good working relationships.
- Know your stuff and back it up. Do initial work to get your citations in order. Master the intellectual content!
- Find where you can add value. Evaluate existing WP article sections in comparison to selected academic sources:
- Paraphrase the main claim or other aspects of an academic source
- Take small steps. Do low stakes WP editing, such as single sentences with verifiable citations.
- You'll avoid frustration and get better feedback or collaborative input to the article.
- Better to write in a sandbox, practice good paraphrasing and citing, and get vetted by peers, rather than commit plagiarism on this public website
- Be responsive to other WP editors, or classmates, who want to modify, dispute, or add to your contributions. Check the Article Talk page.
- You are part of a Big Project. If your specific words get deleted or revised, let it go. You will find ways to contribute much more down the road.
Your scholarly sources and Wikipedia article(s)
[edit]For weeks 4-5, students will work in teams on Wife-sister narratives in Genesis, or related articles, such as Abimelech, Sarah, Rebekah, or Genesis.
- Sources: Each team will receive scholarly, academic sources. The pdfs for academic sources are in Niihka > Resources > Wife-sister
- At the Instructor's discretion, individuals or teams with sufficient Wikipedia and research skills may be welcome to edit alternative Articles
- Objective: Each team will collaborate to place its sources' facts, findings, and claims into the Article(s) in a fair (WP:UNDUE) and neutral way
Step 1: Work as a Team player: Week 4
[edit]- Coordinate and peer review work through your Team page (and User Talk pages), hence
- Every day, check your watchlist
- You MUST keep watch over any Article that you are editing
- Keep watch over your Team page
Step 2: Prepare your list of scholarly sources: Week 3-4, due Monday Feb. 16
[edit]- On your Sandbox or Team page, write a list of the scholarly sources (that I will provide you in class) for the Wife-sister article. You might include JSB annotations.
- Use Wikipedia citation tools, which should be helpful.
- Do not include any non-academic sources.
- Optional: you can list relevant Biblical texts; however, except for a synopsis of a Biblical narrative, do NOT write sentences that are supported only by a verse WP:OR
- Do not include any non-academic sources.
Step 3: Analyze sources and compare to WP articles: Week 4
[edit]- Take proper notes on the scholarly sources:
- Figure out the author's main claim(s). Put these in your own words -- do not mimic the author's sentence structure. You can use the author's theoretical or other key terms.
- Find key facts and explanatory/analytical points
- Outline arguments (evidence, reasons, claim) by scholars
- Keep track of quotations in " " or QQ marks
- Find gaps and errors in the wife-sister narrative or other WP articles, find where you can make a contribution with your notes!
♥ Bring a printout of your notes to class. Student analysis and identified gaps/errors will be discussed in class!
- Never put raw notes into Article or Article Talk pages. You can use your sandbox, or another user subpage, the Team page, or simply keep notes off Wikipedia.
Step 4: Write your sentences with refs, sandboxed: Week 4 by Monday, Feb. 16
[edit]- Write up 1 to 5 sentences for the Wife-sister narratives or other Wikipedia article(s):
- Put the sentences in your personal Sandbox or your Team page
- Each sentence MUST include a reference to a scholarly source. Sentences can share a source, of course.
- References must include the page number(s) in the scholarly article.
- IDEA: To ease peer review, provide "exact quotations" from the scholar that supports your sentence!
Step 5: Introduce your ideas and role on Wikipedia Article Talk page(s): Week 4 by Wednesday, Feb. 18
[edit]- Introduce yourself! Each individual should mention their involvement and proposed edits.
- Put the Course Banner (assignment template) at the top of the Article Talk page, if it's not there already!
- To do this, copy the following -- with the squiggly brackets -- and insert at the top of the article's Talk page: {{course assignment | course = User:ProfGray/Religions of the Hebrew Bible | term = Spring 2015 }}
- All proposed specific edits could include both the sentence(s) and mention your reliable, scholarly source.
Step 6: Peer review each other's sentences and references: Week 5, Monday, Feb. 23
[edit]Review another student's sentence and ref, and comment in their sandbox (or sandbox Talk):
- Check the reference for all its elements (e.g., author, title, publication, date) and page number
- Explain to the student any discrepancy
- Look at the cited page yourself. Does the sentence fit the author's intended meaning?
- Or look at the exact quotations provided by your Team member! (See "recommended" above)
- Explain clearly if the sentence(s) do not fit the source
- Does the sentence describe the scholar's idea and intent in a NEUTRAL (see WP:NPOV) manner? If the content is controversial or disputed, let the sentence attribute the idea to the scholar.
Step 7: Edit the assigned Article(s) with vetted sentences, due: Week 5, Wednesday, Feb. 25
[edit]- All specific edits must include a reference to a reliable source.
- For now, only use sources approved by our course
- Exception: feel free to write section "lead" sentences that summarize the rest of the section. These can often simply rely on the sources cited below.
- Your first edits should be vetted (peer reviewed) with your Team.
- After your sentences are vetted (peer reviewed), put them in your portfolio and -- if feasible -- into the Article(s)
- Don't worry if the sentence is reverted (rejected) by other Wikipedia users. To avoid reverts, you will first discuss your ideas on Article Talk pages. Regardless: Your grade does NOT depend on whether your contributions are actually accepted in Wikipedia.
♥ Place all your substantive edits, i.e., sentences and references, in your Portfolio page for grading. Or print them out. Or provide permanent links. Note: you do NOT have to edit the actual articles for a grade. You can submit proposed edits instead.