Writing for Digital Media, Summer 2019/Week 2: June 3: Difference between revisions
From Gerald R. Lucas
(Created page.) |
m (Updated shortcut.) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{3108sm19}} | {{3108sm19}} | ||
{{goal|title=This week’s|Evaluate an article on Wikipedia.|Get started on Wikipedia.|Set up your journal and introduce yourself.|Join the course’s WikiEdu dashboard.|shortcut=Sum19: | {{goal|title=This week’s|Evaluate an article on Wikipedia.|Get started on Wikipedia.|Set up your journal and introduce yourself.|Join the course’s WikiEdu dashboard.|shortcut=Sum19:W2}} | ||
This week, Carroll discusses strategies for writing and editing, and training addresses evaluating Wikipedia articles and making your first edits. Remember to use your journal writing to practice both your writing skills and wiki coding skills. You should be learning new ones every week. | This week, Carroll discusses strategies for writing and editing, and training addresses evaluating Wikipedia articles and making your first edits. Remember to use your journal writing to practice both your writing skills and wiki coding skills. You should be learning new ones every week. |
Revision as of 07:30, 17 May 2019
58774 & 59513 | NMAC 3108.01–.02 | Online | Summer, 2019 |
---|
This week’s:
|
This week, Carroll discusses strategies for writing and editing, and training addresses evaluating Wikipedia articles and making your first edits. Remember to use your journal writing to practice both your writing skills and wiki coding skills. You should be learning new ones every week.
Read
- Carroll, chapters 3 and 4.
- Niklas Göke, “How to Edit Your Writing in Three Passes.”[1]
Do
- Training: Evaluating Articles and Sources and How to edit: Wikicode vs Visual Editor
- Discussion: Thinking about sources and plagiarism
Write
- Your third journal post should evaluate a Wikipedia article. Go through the exercise on WikiEdu, but instead of leaving your evaluation on the article’s talk page, post it in your journal. Remember to link to the page you’re evaluating.
- Comment on at least one other classmate’s evaluation.
- Your fourth journal entry on a topic of your choosing.
- Comment on at least one other classmate’s post.
Notes
- ↑ Even though Göke suggests Skitch, you might consider using the Hemingway App for drafting and revising.