Symposium: Wikipedia and Education in the Time of the “Crisis of Information”

MO
Mathieu O'Neil
Tue, Aug 30, 2022 8:03 AM

Symposium: Wikipedia and Education in the Time of the “Crisis of Information”

Friday 16 September 2022, 9am-4pm

Anne Harding Centre - Building 24, University of Canberra

In the age of the infodemic and growing distrust towards the institutions of liberal democracy there can be little doubt that information is in crisis. The Wikipedia and Education in the Time of the “Crisis of Information” Symposium brings together academics who use Wikipedia as part of their teaching practice or analyse wiki data, and key actors bridging the academia-Wikipedia divide. Participants will share their experiences, address Wikipedia’s potential to address the “crisis of information”, and critically reflect on what role educational institutions can play in this respect.

The symposium will begin with the launch of the book Six Fact-Checking Lessons for Kids, which compiles educational resources developed as part of the Co-Developing a New Approach to Media Literacy in the Attention Economy research project. This project is part of the Affiliated Schools Research program, in which researchers from the University of Canberra collaborate with ACT school teachers.

Cost: free, but registration essential

To register: https://events.humanitix.com/wikipedia-and-education-in-the-time-of-the-crisis-of-information-symposium

Convenor

Mathieu O’Neil, DCPC/News and Media Research Centre, Faculty of Arts and Design, University of Canberra

Keynotes

LiAnna Davis, Deputy Director, Wiki Education: Addressing Wikipedia’s content gaps

Thomas Shafee, Swinburne University - Editor, WikiJournal of Science: Wikipedia as a key research outreach and teaching platform

Participants

Rachel Cunneen, Faculty of Education, University of Canberra: Wikipedia and information literacy in schools

Toby Hudson, Faculty of Science, University of Sydney: Getting structured data about anything and everything

Amanda Lawrence, ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society (ADM+S), RMIT University: Wikimedia and the evidence ecosystem

Pru Mitchell, Wikimedia Australia: Using Wikipedia in Class

James Neill, Faculty of Health, University of Canberra: Wikipedia as a key research outreach and teaching platform

For schedule information, participant bios, presentation summaries and additional resources please go to:

https://www.canberra.edu.au/about-uc/faculties/arts-design/research/wikipedia-and-education

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Symposium: Wikipedia and Education in the Time of the “Crisis of Information” Friday 16 September 2022, 9am-4pm Anne Harding Centre - Building 24, University of Canberra In the age of the infodemic and growing distrust towards the institutions of liberal democracy there can be little doubt that information is in crisis. The Wikipedia and Education in the Time of the “Crisis of Information” Symposium brings together academics who use Wikipedia as part of their teaching practice or analyse wiki data, and key actors bridging the academia-Wikipedia divide. Participants will share their experiences, address Wikipedia’s potential to address the “crisis of information”, and critically reflect on what role educational institutions can play in this respect. The symposium will begin with the launch of the book Six Fact-Checking Lessons for Kids, which compiles educational resources developed as part of the Co-Developing a New Approach to Media Literacy in the Attention Economy research project. This project is part of the Affiliated Schools Research program, in which researchers from the University of Canberra collaborate with ACT school teachers. Cost: free, but registration essential To register: https://events.humanitix.com/wikipedia-and-education-in-the-time-of-the-crisis-of-information-symposium Convenor Mathieu O’Neil, DCPC/News and Media Research Centre, Faculty of Arts and Design, University of Canberra Keynotes LiAnna Davis, Deputy Director, Wiki Education: Addressing Wikipedia’s content gaps Thomas Shafee, Swinburne University - Editor, WikiJournal of Science: Wikipedia as a key research outreach and teaching platform Participants Rachel Cunneen, Faculty of Education, University of Canberra: Wikipedia and information literacy in schools Toby Hudson, Faculty of Science, University of Sydney: Getting structured data about anything and everything Amanda Lawrence, ARC Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society (ADM+S), RMIT University: Wikimedia and the evidence ecosystem Pru Mitchell, Wikimedia Australia: Using Wikipedia in Class James Neill, Faculty of Health, University of Canberra: Wikipedia as a key research outreach and teaching platform For schedule information, participant bios, presentation summaries and additional resources please go to: https://www.canberra.edu.au/about-uc/faculties/arts-design/research/wikipedia-and-education =-=-=