Welcome to Wikipedia edit

Hello, and welcome to Wikipedia! I'm delighted to see the neuroscience-related educational project you have started. Please feel free to get in touch with me any time if you or any of your students have any questions at all about editing at Wikipedia. --Tryptofish (talk) 16:37, 8 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

A bit of advice edit

Hi -- I saw your message on Tryptofish's talk page, hope you don't mind if I reply. I urge you not to use the "Good Article" process as a criterion for your students -- I've seen a couple of professors try that for class projects, and it has never worked. The problem is that the GA process (or any other of Wikipedia's evaluation processes) is not suited to doing things in a predictable way or on a fixed schedule. I think that projects like this can be a good experience for students, the professor, and Wikipedia; but they work much better if all grade-related evaluation is done by the professor (or by a teaching assistant) rather than by exploiting Wikipedia's processes. Regards, Looie496 (talk) 15:01, 9 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

Good Article edit

Thanks for the input, Looie. I was considering having the GA status earn extra credit points. ProfRox (talk) 18:47, 11 September 2011 (UTC)Reply

I'll add that I have also had poor luck with using wikipedia processes in class. In fact, I think in future iterations of this assignment my students are going to work in sandbox only until after revision, peer-edits, and grading. The Wikipedia community is great, but they are too fast for me. I can't give feedback to my students and let them correct their mistake before it has been flagged, removed, and a terse note left for them on their discussion page. --MTHarden (talk) 15:27, 6 October 2011 (UTC)Reply