Final survey, Education Innovation Project: Last chance to have your say
The
final survey for the Education Innovation Project pilots is now online. We'd again love to get your feedback, so if you've got 5-10 minutes, please
visit our survey and let us know your thoughts about you found using a wiki in class. Your responses will be used for quality assurance purposes within the ANU, and may be communicated in publications outside the University.
I just want to say thanks to your whole class for taking part in this project. Our next step will be to produce a report to the College that outlines staff and student experiences of using such online tools in class, along with recommendations for any future use.
Thanks once again, and all the best for the end of semester!
meg.
Backing up your work
Although your lecturer is backing up the course site regularly, you, as a student, are still expected to retain a copy of your own work -- just as you are expected to retain a copy of other assessment items, such as essays. The easiest way to keep a copy of your online work is to save the page where your work appears as an html file.
To do this, go to the page you want to save and, in your FireFox of Internet Explorer browser, go to:
- File > Save Page As
- Download the page to your hard drive (or flash stick or other drive) and keep it safe.
Each time you publish something new on the class site, you should make a copy of it.
Welcome
This site is for Media Cultures 2 students ... where you will be building up group wikis which will be assessed for the overall content and look of the wiki itself, individual contribution, individual presentations on wiki involvement and finally... an assessable assessment on the use of the wiki itself as a class tool.Watch this space...And don't worry! There will be plenty of support for this venture and inevitable pitfalls will be taken into account assessment-wise.Cathie