Wikipedia:WikiProject United States Public Policy/Courses/Spring 2011/Federal Indian Law and Policy (Kristin Ruppel)/Progress Report (2011-01-24)

Submitted 2011-01-24 Fellow Ambassadors

Progress Report #1:Wikipedia:WikiProject United States Public Policy/Courses/Spring 2011/Federal Indian Law and Policy (Kristin Ruppel) - Montana State University

Bonnie McCallum [User:McMormor] and I, Mike Cline [User:Mike Cline] met with Professor Ruppel’s class today for the first time to introduce the Wikipedia Project and set the course forward for future work. I presented a 35 minute presentation covering the Introduction to Wikipedia and the methodology by which Wikipedia assignments will be devised for the class students. The attached Powerpoint contains the slides used for the presentation.

There are many details to work out but we'll be taking the following approach to creating Wikipedia assignments for ~24 undergraduates and 10 graduate students. (no experienced Wikipedians among them)

After the presentation I spent ~ 30 minutes with the ten graduate students helping them outline the tasks necessary to accomplish their 1st assignment—a comprehensive literature review and WP gap analysis. The following approach is underway and will be documented on the Course Page.

The approach:

Using the 4 course goals in the syllabus as a basis, the 10 graduate students will collaboratively produce a comprehensive literature review on the subject of Federal Indian Law and Policy. This will be produced as a subpage to this course page Federal Indian Law and Policy Literature Review and is being organized along 10 major topic areas chosen by the students.

As part of the literature review, the grad students will identify the major gaps in WP articles and content relative to the course goals. This analysis will become the basis for establishing individual undergraduate assignments.

What we expect to flow out of this review and analysis will be several types of articles and content work--notable biographies, events, legislation, case law, bibliographies, literature, etc. Additionally, as a direct result of the review and analysis the grad students should be able to publish in the article space a comprehensive annotated bibliography of Federal Indian Law and Policy and an Outline of Federal Indian Law and Policy (i.e. mapping all the related articles on the subject in WP).

An additional outcome of the review and analysis may be the opportunity to write WP articles on key and important literature on the subject.

The graduate students have been tasked to complete this review and analysis by start of class on February 7 (two weeks), where individual undergraduates will be assigned specific WP articles to work on. I will facilitate that session.

Once assignments for undergraduates become clear, each graduate student will also take a mentoring role (subject matter wise) for a small number of undergraduates.

In the interim, Bonnie McCallum will teach some fundamental WP editing and article skills next week as I will be out of town.

The presentations were well received and many of the students, both undergraduates and graduates, expressed excitement about the project. The graduates enthusiastically embraced their leadership role.

Another progress report will follow Bonnie’s work next week.

Mike Cline Bozeman, Montana