Wiki activity: Difference between revisions
(added concept of 9 types - see discussion page) |
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"Wiki" means "super fast" in the Hawaiian language, and it is the speed of creating and updating pages that is one of the defining aspects of wiki technology. Generally, there is no prior review before modifications are accepted or posted. Most Moodle wikis are open to the course participants. In later versions of Moodle, a wiki can be group specific. | "Wiki" means "super fast" in the Hawaiian language, and it is the speed of creating and updating pages that is one of the defining aspects of wiki technology. Generally, there is no prior review before modifications are accepted or posted. Most Moodle wikis are open to the course participants. In later versions of Moodle, a wiki can be group specific. | ||
There are potentially 9 | There are potentially 9 different ways a Wiki can work in Moodle 1.8, depending upon two spectific settings. A matrix of Group mode settings (no group, seperate groups, visible groups) and type settings (teacher, group and student) will define its behavior. | ||
Note: while MoodleDocs and Wikipedia are also wikis, the Moodle wiki module | Note: while MoodleDocs and Wikipedia are also wikis, the Moodle wiki module |
Revision as of 19:05, 29 December 2006
A wiki enables documents to be authored collectively in a simple markup language using a web browser. A teacher can add one or more Moodle Wiki activities to a course. The Wiki module enables participants to work together by adding, expanding and changing the content of a special set of linked webpages. Old page versions are never deleted and can be restored.
"Wiki" means "super fast" in the Hawaiian language, and it is the speed of creating and updating pages that is one of the defining aspects of wiki technology. Generally, there is no prior review before modifications are accepted or posted. Most Moodle wikis are open to the course participants. In later versions of Moodle, a wiki can be group specific.
There are potentially 9 different ways a Wiki can work in Moodle 1.8, depending upon two spectific settings. A matrix of Group mode settings (no group, seperate groups, visible groups) and type settings (teacher, group and student) will define its behavior.
Note: while MoodleDocs and Wikipedia are also wikis, the Moodle wiki module is a slightly different flavor.
See also
- Using Moodle Wiki module forum
- Using Moodle Chapter 11: Wikis
- Using Moodle Template for wikis forum discussion
- Wiki development
- Tiddlywiki integration