Framing the Sprints: from 'making' to 'sharing' OERs
Thus far, the sprints have been framed as an opportunity to 'make' new resources for kiwi educators.
But there are plenty of educators that have a bunch of great resources on their hard-drives - and, for many different reasons, have been reluctant to share.
Before we do a bigger promotional push to schools, I'd be interested to see what people think about emphasising the sprints as an opportunity to improve and publish resources - openly and legally - that teachers have already made.
Marielle Lange Wed 2 Mar 2016 3:07AM
Checking out Wikieducator. It is taking well over two minutes to open any page. That could be a real issue on a super high traffic week-end.
Marielle Lange Wed 2 Mar 2016 3:44AM
More on TiddlyWiki - what it is https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtCUr83XgyE and how to use https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KtCUr83XgyE. The main advantage over etherpad is that there are a number of plugins to take care of things like embedding audio or video, math notations, mind maps, time lines, graphs, etc.
Marielle Lange · Wed 2 Mar 2016 3:02AM
Re git. Consider github as it provides you with the option to add a wiki to any project. There is no requirement to upload any file, you can simply use the wiki. Another option is to use tiddlywiki on github.io -- example http://welford.github.io/. TiddlyWiki is a wiki that you can use on your computer (offline) and publish online when you are ready. To create a new wiki would take only 3 step (1) login (2) fork (3) open github.io page and start writing.