hello Wikimedia education enthusiasts!

Next month I am giving a presentation to a group of my colleagues, who are
Adult Basic /Literacy Educators in Canada. My presentation is titled
"Wikipedia – the overlooked and misunderstood resource".  The presentation
is scheduled for 1.5 hours but since it's the last presentation of the day
nobody will mind if it's a bit shorter ;-)

Here are the main points I want to get across:

   - there are several myths about the role of Wikipedia in academic work &
   I want to dispel these
   - academically rigorous ways to use Wikipedia do exist & we'll talk
   about these
   - learning to navigate Wikipedia provides a "teachable moment" to
   educate your students about academic integrity, a 'neutral point of view',
   and the reliability of information.
   - Is knowledge just a collection of 'facts'? Or is knowledge something
   negotiated? Let's discuss our own beliefs about how knowledge is
   constructed, validated, shared, and "owned."

Here's my question: do any of you have presentations (e.g. Powerpoints,
Slideshare etc.) related to these topics that you'd be willing to share
with me? Or just any ideas, suggestions, or comments that could work in my
presentation?

My apologies if this is an inappropriate forum for such a request.

Gina Bennett; Faculty
University of the Fraser Valley
Hope, BC, Canada
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