Actually many academics do spend substantial amounts of time contributing to 
Wikipedia and have done since its inception. Wikipedia is also of course a 
great knowledge transfer tool. Like all encyclopedias it offers a very good 
general overview of diverse subject areas and has great reach. It does not 
however produce depth of analysis. It's an encylopedia. It's strength is in 
developing horizontal structures but not so good at digging deep into often 
arcane but nevertheless important subjects. Sadly it's often only academics who 
are interested in researching and publishing these things . I guess we're good 
for something eh ;-)
 
I'm all for collaborative knowledge development both inside and outside of the 
acadamy but lets not throw the baby out with the bathwater. 
 
As Simon has already pointed out, there are already many open publishing 
initiatives and all publically funded UK research will have to be made free at 
the point of access in future and much of it already is. Despite what climate 
change deniers will try to tell you.
 
all the best
 
tom
 
 
 

--- On Fri, 19/3/10, James Wallbank <[email protected]> wrote:


From: James Wallbank <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [NetBehaviour] Most students use Wikipedia, avoid telling profs 
about it.
To: "NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Friday, 19 March, 2010, 15:39


>From my experience, I'd suggest that nowadays most professors also use 
Wikipedia - they're just sensible enough not to admit this to other 
researchers!

As an open, free, and peer-reviewed (think about what this means) 
information resource, Wikipedia kicks the living hell out of academic 
journals in terms of reach, dissemination and knowledge transfer. It 
challenges the whole structure of academic hierarchy. It might (horror 
of horrors) even suggest that knowledge development and innovation 
happen more quickly and more effectively outside academic institutions 
than inside them.

Ouch, ouch, ouch! Prepare in the next few years to see systematic 
assaults by established academic institutions and their funders on the 
whole concept of open knowledge sharing. But wait... that's happening 
already!

Let's face it, the easiest, and most effective way for academia to 
improve the quality of Wikipedia would be for them to engage with the 
process and edit inaccurate pages. If well informed students and tutors 
spent an hour a week... However, this runs counter to academic 
hierarchies' primary mission, which is to ration (not to encourage) 
dissemination of knowledge to preserve their own business models.

Look at the language in which many academic articles are couched - 
deliberately obfuscated, opaque, incomprehensible. The oft-touted 
suggestion that clarity and comprehensibility are "inaccurate" or 
"imprecise" is nonsense - an intelligent writer can make the most 
complex subject seem comprehensible to any reasonably educated reader if 
they so choose.

The ONLY correct answer to dissemination and knowledge transfer is free, 
open online dissemination. The Institute for Network Cultures in 
Amsterdam already does this. Many research funding bodies are gradually 
coming to this conclusion, and making open publication a requirement of 
research funding.

The only catches are that: (i) open publication does not have an easily 
understood income generation model, and (ii) it fundamentally undermines 
academic institutions' claims to be uniquely empowered to develop knowledge.

Best Regards,

James
=====

Ruth Catlow wrote:
> if this is really true the profs need to wise-up.
> Wikipedia is a great first stop for research allowing students to do a 
> proper broad sweep to find their subject.
> Its also a useful tool for reflecting on the ways in which knowledge 
> is constructed (demonstrating concepts such as hierarchies of 
> authority, filtering, peer-review, gate-keeping, competition, 
> contested knowledge etc).
>
> Ruth
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> *From*: marc garrett <[email protected] 
> <mailto:marc%20garrett%20%[email protected]%3e>>
> *Reply-To*: NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity 
> <[email protected] 
> <mailto:netbehaviour%20for%20networked%20distributed%20creativity%20%[email protected]%3e>>
> *To*: NetBehaviour for networked distributed creativity 
> <[email protected] 
> <mailto:netbehaviour%20for%20networked%20distributed%20creativity%20%[email protected]%3e>>
> *Subject*: [NetBehaviour] Most students use Wikipedia, avoid telling 
> profs about it.
> *Date*: Fri, 19 Mar 2010 09:29:45 +0000
>
> Most students use Wikipedia, avoid telling profs about it.
>
> By Jacqui Cheng.
>
> Surprise! Most students use Wikipedia at some point during their 
> research on a paper or project, and they usually do so early on in the 
> process. Online peer-reviewed journal First Monday recently published 
> the findings of its research on student Wikipedia use and said that the 
> service often serves as a starting point for the students who use it, 
> allowing them to gather information for further investigation elsewhere. 
> This is despite the fact that their professors still frown on Wikipedia 
> use—but it seems that students believe what their profs don't know won't 
> hurt them.
>
> http://tinyurl.com/yjjq9o9
> _______________________________________________
> NetBehaviour mailing list
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> http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
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