User talk:Guy vandegrift

Wiki created
Hello, I would like to tell you that I have created your wiki. You can now access it at https://wikiversity.miraheze.org. You should automatically have been granted founder rights (administrator and bureaucrat), if that's not the case then please leave a notice on Stewards' noticeboard so we can fix it immediately. Do not hesitate to ask questions if your question was not answered in our FAQ. Also, if you want a extension, gadget, or anything else, please ask us here. Thank you for choosing Miraheze, and we wish you good luck with your wiki! Reception123 (talk) ( contribs  ) 14:49, 4 September 2016 (UTC)


 * I was so busy having fun on https://wikiversity.miraheze.org that I forgot to Thank you!!! --Guy vandegrift (talk) 21:37, 10 September 2016 (UTC)
 * Your welcome! If you need anything feel free to ask. Reception123 (talk) ( contribs  ) 15:53, 11 September 2016 (UTC)

Note to self
https://phabricator.miraheze.org/T800

x
--Guy vandegrift (talk) 17:05, 30 September 2016 (UTC)

--Mattsiefring10 (talk) 17:07, 30 September 2016 (UTC)

--Boss429 (talk) 17:11, 30 September 2016 (UTC)

User:17hayel

Editing on Meta
Note that Miraheze Meta is meant to be an administrative/central wiki for global matters. Please do not use it for your students to do anything except register for an account. If you'd like, each student may have their own wiki, or you, as the instructor, may have a wiki that is 'central' to them, but not for all of Miraheze. I just noticed an influx of various edits appearing on Meta, along with the creation of (a) page(s) that shouldn't exist here.

Sorry for the trouble, but Miraheze Meta should be clear and easy to navigate for any new users, not wondering what random pages are. -- Cheers, NDKilla ( Talk • Contribs ) 17:33, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * Thanks for clarifying. I will blank our page called "Wikiversity" right now.  But I am still confused about what defines a "random edit".  I presume my template in my own userspace was "over the top" and will clear that.


 * Would you prefer that we did nothing on the meta, including on our own user pages? If so, I will clear my user page and instruct my students to do the same.


 * I want to emphasize that we should do what is good for Miraheze, since students can create user pages on Wikiversity. Do you want users to modify their own meta user pages?  If not, we will all clear ours right now. --Guy vandegrift (talk) 17:48, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * First of all, most of the edits to your students user spaces appeared to be the addition/removal of a single period (.) after the template. I'm not sure what the point of this was? If it was to make the update to the template appear on that page, you/your students should learn how to purge the cache without updating the page. (This reduces/eliminates RecentChanges flooding, and keeps the edit history of individual pages more concise.) Please see here for help on purging pages.


 * Also, you/your students may have user pages, and subpages, here on Meta, but they should probably describe your users/uses/what you guys do here. Meta should not be used for any type of instruction / class use.--Guy vandegrift (talk) 22:17, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * Your template is probably fine, especially in your user space, but I'd prefer anything related to your instructions / class / environment be on one of your own wikis or /class/ wiki.


 * I'm going to delete the mainspace pages you have blanked, but if you (temporarily) need the contents or edit history, you may request undeletion and have them moved to your userspace. -- Cheers, NDKilla ( Talk • Contribs ) 18:13, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * I will keep future activity on the meta to a minimum. I would like to instruct more students to create private wikis solely for the purpose of doing assignments that must be kept private until they are handed in for a grade.  At the moment, this will involve a dozen or so students in a pilot program.  Next year it might be hundreds, but I can imagine all universities doing this, and that would mean millions of private wikis.  Can you handle such growth?  Do you want it?  Miraheze is a little over a year old and hasn't really been "discovered" yet, IMHO.   --Guy vandegrift (talk) 18:42, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * User:Labster is probably the guy to go to for current growth, but we're actually planning/hoping to upgrade our database server's storage soon as we have about 1,500 wikis at the moment and are using most of our storage space. Costs aside, our current host has several larger plans that we can scale to as-required, and I'm pretty sure most of us are planning on sticking around. As the technical or administrative needs of these wikis grow it could be problematic due to the shear volume. Have you considered becoming a wiki creator so that you can create your students wikis for them? (Instead of them dealing with meta wiki / requesting a wiki?) -- Cheers, NDKilla ( Talk • Contribs ) 19:09, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * It seems to me that I will be obligated to help create wikis if I bring in 100 students each year. Just today I talked with an economics professor who also seemed interested.  Should I add my name at Helpful_people?--Guy vandegrift (talk) 20:08, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * You can add yourself there if you want, don't think there's really any regulation there. Also, if you requested it I thought wiki creator might just help you and your students get wikis with less interaction with the people behind them. I'm not sure that's what you want though. Either way, id give you wiki creator if you read the guide and requested it, -!: you wouldn't be obligated to handle other requests. -- Cheers, NDKilla ( Talk • Contribs ) 21:29, 30 September 2016 (UTC)


 * Yes, I would like to read the guide and create wikis for students at my campus. --Guy vandegrift (talk) 22:17, 30 September 2016 (UTC)

(reset indent) Please read the guide then reply here. I can add you to the group so you can check out the UI and familiarize yourself before you need to start creating them for your students. Also, how do you plan on getting access to read all the other wikis, would you talk your students through adding your user to them, or would you be the founder and then add them as members? (I don't really need to know this, I was just wondering). -- Cheers, NDKilla ( Talk • Contribs ) 04:34, 2 October 2016 (UTC)


 * You wrote "how do you plan on getting access to read all the other wikis..?" My tentative solution is to have every student own a private wiki, with the understanding that exclusive "one-member" access is not only tolerated but encouraged. They will normally print the wikitext into a pdf file and submit that electronicaly using a system outside Miraheze.  If the the instructor intends to edit and/or publish the work on Wikipedia or Wikiversity, the student could also submit the wikitext.  This way, the minumum number of Miraheze private wikis created would be the number of students plus the number of teachers.  Students could use the same wiki for all their classes.
 * Again, we're totally fine with each student having their own wiki with you want, I was just wondering how you'd read it. It sounds like you wont even want access to student's wikis and they can just do whatever on them then submit the required pages/whatever? -- Cheers, NDKilla ( Talk • Contribs ) 01:07, 3 October 2016 (UTC)


 * Excuse this long digression: If this thing gets big, it could get really big. The student loan debt in the USA exceeds our credit card debt.  I have taught all levels of university physics, astronomy, statitistics, and math for 29 years (full time).  Most of this has been at the introductory level (first two years of college).  We are wasting a great deal of money on this instruction.  If Google can make a car that handles city traffic, educators and computer experts should have no trouble finding a way to drastially reduce the cost of these introductory courses.  We need two things:  (1) quality prose that explains it all, and (2) a way to cheaply verify that the students have learned the basic facts.  Quizbank is my answer to the first, and private wikis is my answer to the second.  If students write their essays in private, they can receive letter grades for publishing quality expository prose in a  WikiJournal.  Such contributions not only yield an effective way to grade the students, but will lead to an encyclopedia of teaching materials.--Guy vandegrift (talk) 13:47, 2 October 2016 (UTC)
 * (No idea what I'm supposed to do with this information?? I guess it's nice to know why you want wikis :)) -- Cheers, NDKilla ( Talk • Contribs ) 01:07, 3 October 2016 (UTC)

Aside on the need for Wikiversity and WikJournals
Some people on Wikiversity seem angry at Wikipedia. I am not, and have great respect for Wikipedia. Having said that, Wikipedia articles are not effective teaching tools. See for example the statement at the top of this article that describes different types of writing styles. They want to remove the Embedded lists and replace them with prose that no student will want to read. I "rescued" the link w:Special:Permalink/740783868 and placed is where I can find it. Someday, we need a quiz on the various writing styles, and students will be able to use the concise description from that permalink. Meanwhile, it is entirely possible that the Wikipedia article may drift away from its present useful format.--Guy vandegrift (talk) 14:08, 2 October 2016 (UTC)
 * Even when pages are edited, for the most part wikipedia keeps it's edit history. Not sure how this is relevent here or what you want us to do? -- Cheers, NDKilla ( Talk • Contribs ) 01:07, 3 October 2016 (UTC)
 * By "rescuing" the link, I meant that I saved the permalink so I wouldn't have to look for it in the history page if the article becomes less useful for teaching. The fact that all wikis keep their (undeleted) histories is essential to my vision regarding using wikis to teach because teachers need "static" textbooks that won't change in the middle of the course. All I want you at Mirahenze to do is succeed as a wikifarm.  I remain convinced that someday, the use of private wikis by students will become the industry standard in college education, which could someday make Mirahenze almost as big as Wikipedia.--Guy vandegrift (talk) 12:58, 3 October 2016 (UTC)