Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

What is it?

A wiki is a collaborative space where many people may work together to share knowledge. The most well known example of this is Wikipedia, where people from around the world work together to share and pool information to create an encyclopedia of terms, much larger than would be possible by an individual. However, not all wikis have to be used as encyclopedia of terms, they can be used privately by a group of people to develop a collaborative document, This could be anything from a project plan, article or camping list. A useful feature is their ability to be easily searched and linked to other related knowledge. Another example of how a wiki can be used is this space right here! The UCL wiki offers everyone there own space and is used by many teams (such as E-Learning Environments) to create an collaborate on documentation, guides and knowledge based articles. 

Wikis allow people to collaborate on text based documents, share media and documents and comment on each other's work. Once saved a new version is created, so you can always retrieve work if it is modified or deleted. You can also use the revision history to see who has contributed what.

Wikis at UCL

  • UCL Wiki - you're looking at now (smile) 
    • The UCL Wiki allows you to add what are known as macros to your page to show various information dynamically

...

Gadget
preferencestitle=UCL%20E-Learning%20Wiki%20Activity&keys=UCLELearning&username=&numofentries=10&isConfigured=true&refresh=120
urlrest/gadgets/1.0/g/com.atlassian.streams.confluence:activitystream-gadget/gadgets/conf-activitystream-gadget.xml

...

...

Contributors
spacesUCLELearning
Widget Connector
urlhttps://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ajzwb56hZgwadC1sRnlUWUdVYU5mRm40OTdoQVNGUlE&usp=sharing

...

    • Wiki for examples of macros you might use.
  • Moodle Wiki - embed a Wiki in your Moodle course

Popular sites

Cost

Most sites are FREE and community driven.