Dear all,

I have just finished my second "teaching with Wikipedia" article. I'd 
like to publish it in an established academic journal that, if possible, 
supports open content. Unfortunately, I do not have much experience with 
this sector of the journals (teaching/education/pedagogy journals), nor 
with journal impact magic, and thus I'd very much appreciate your 
suggestions where to publish. I have, of course, quickly Google'd few 
open content teaching journals, but I admit, selfishly, that entering 
the job market, I'd prefer my CV to include, if possible, higher-end 
journals...

(In my sociology field, the most respected educational journal, 
"Teaching Sociology", is, sadly, not open content...).

If anybody is interested in reading and commenting on my article in 
question (tentatively titled "Wikis and Wikipedia as a Teaching Tool: 
Five Years Later"), I have made it available on Google Docs (just let me 
know and I'll send you a link, and enable commenting for your account).

PS. My old 2007 article (titled, unsurprisingly, "Wikis and Wikipedia as 
a Teaching Tool") was published here:
http://www.itdl.org/Journal/Jan_07/article02.htm
I am still content with it for what it was in 2007, but by 2011, it is, 
I'll be the first to admit it, rather obsolete.

-- 
Piotr Konieczny
PhD Candidate
Dept of Sociology
Uni of Pittsburgh

"To be defeated and not submit, is victory; to be victorious and rest on 
one's laurels, is defeat." --Józef Pilsudski

_______________________________________________
Education mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/education

Reply via email to