This semester I have had to abandon most of my wiki-based activities with my students, which has been disappointing and frustrating. Just to keep things fresh, I had switched to using a WetPaint wiki this year (last year I used Wikispaces). A few things went wrong with that.
1. Public Education Security
I hadn’t counted on the increased level of security that schools in our Board would implement this year. Many sites that I have used are now banned, and WetPaint’s “edit” function seems to fall under that. I can work to get it unblocked, but it’s a long, complicated process that I just haven’t gotten around to.
2. No Trial Run
I don’t really have an opportunity to fully test new systems before going live with my class. 30 students jumping onto a system, all with different user names, passwords, and privileges, is a lot different than me as a teacher working on it. It would have been nice to know about the WetPaint issue before the semester started, but it wasn’t something I was able to do.
3. No Flex Time
The lab at our school is booked solid. Once I recognized the issue with WetPaint, I could have perhaps taken the class in the next day, having moved their work to a Wikispaces wiki. Alas, there aren’t any spare minutes available for the lab, so mistakes really couldn’t be recovered.
I’m sure that there must be some lessons here for me: Maybe I should have a couple of wikis ready to go before the semester starts so that I can quickly switch to a working system if I need to? It seems like a lot of work.
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Image by Justin Marty
I’ve noticed that a lot of us educators who are online blog about blogging.