Create an evaluation tool for examining the quality of a Wikipedia entry.
The big question: What makes an entry a "quality" entry?
Can the students locate existing tools that will help them?
Each small group/individual student creates a preliminary tool, then come together as a whole team to merge the best ideas together to create one ideal tool that can be used by the class/group for the rest of the year.
Watch the Presidential race through the candidates' pages.
How often do the pages change?
Do the changes reflect current events?
What ethical responsibilities are involved?
This could be a great exercise in social studies, political science, current events, critical literacy, math (charting changes), etc.
Compare wiki page to candidate's official page (Prof. Hickey)
Hold a Socratic seminar with Wikipedia as the "text."
The students take ownership in Socratic discussion, where the teacher poses thoughtful questions and then takes the role of observer, occasionally stepping in to redirect, pose a new question, or remind the discussants of the rules of conversation.
Possible questions include:
How is Wikipedia an example of Collective Knowledge?
What qualifies a person as an "expert" - in Wikipedia and in life?
What hidden purposes might there be for putting information in Wikipedia? Are they ethical?
Determine if categories of knowledge are complete.
Select a content area and go to the main page for that main domain, called a portal. Look at the section on Categories. Look at the levels within the Categories. Often the super ordinate categories may be complete with all of the branches of knowledge within that domain, but then the subordinate categories are lacking or include miniscule items which should belong to a lower level of hierarchy.