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From: David Rosen <djrosen@comcast.net>
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Subject: [NIFL-AALPD:2266] ALE Wiki
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Dear Colleague,
The Adult Literacy Education (ALE) Wiki now has over 400 registered
users, 34 of whom have added their introductions to the Who's Here
page. It now has over 500 pages of content on research and
professional wisdom in adult literacy education. A wiki* is a web
environment in which (after a free registration and log-in) you can
easily add content as well as read it. So the ALE Wiki is a
community of practice, with practitioners, researchers and learners
from all over North America.
The wiki is organized by content areas, or topics. Currently these
include:
1. Adult Learners' Self-Study
2. Adult Literacy Accountability
3. Adult Literacy Professional Development
4. Assessment Information
5. Basic Literacy
6. Classroom Practices that Work Professional Wisdom from
Practitioners and Research
7. Corrections Education
8. Distance and Persistence
9. English for Speakers of Other Languages
10. Evidence Based Adult Education
11. Family Literacy
12. GED Research
13. Learner Persistence
14. Learning Disabilities
15. Numeracy Research and Practice
16. Participatory and Emancipatory Education
17. Project Based Learning
18. Public Policy
19. Research to Practice, Practice to Research
20. Technology
21. Workforce, Workplace and Worker Education
22. Young Adult Literacy
More topics can be added, and more content can be added within each
of the topic areas. The topic areas are usually organized as follows:
• Questions -- usually actual questions from the field, often those
posted by people on NIFL electronic discussion lists
• Discussions -- usually selected threads from electronic discussion
lists which are often added to on the Wiki. Sometimes these are
summarized.
• Glossary
• Research -- citations and links to pertinent research in the topic
area
• Resources -- links to resources which are pertinent to the topic area
How can one use the ALE Wiki ?
... in ways yet to be discovered. But so far, users have:
• looked for questions in a specific topic area with which they, as
teachers, are facing
• found references to research which they needed for proposals or to
improve program practice
• looked up puzzling terms in the glossary
• remembered a discussion held on an electronic list, found the
thread archived in the ALE Wiki, and sent the ALE Wiki address to a
colleague
I hope you will look at the ALE Wiki -- which is a work in progress
-- and register and add to it. Please let me know other uses that
you have found for the ALE Wiki, and if you are interested in being a
topic area leader for one of the current topics --or a new wiki topic.
* wiki (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiki) is a Hawaiian word meaning
"quick" - wiki wiki means "very very quickly".
David J. Rosen
Wiki Organizer and "Wikiteer"
djrosen@comcast.net
This archive was generated by hypermail 2b30 : Mon Oct 31 2005 - 09:48:39 EST