ANN ARBOR, Mich.— Halogen bonding, hyperconjugation, electroactive polymers—such subjects are typical fare in graduate-level chemistry courses. But how many classes challenge students to explain the concepts to the whole world?
That’s essentially the assignment in Anne McNeil’s courses at the University of Michigan, where teams of students are given the task of revising a Wikipedia entry on an esoteric subject, making it understandable not only to fellow scientists but also to general readers.
McNeil, assistant professor of chemistry and of macromolecular science and engineering, had two main objectives in mind when she came up with the Wikipedia project. One was a general desire to improve public understanding of science by training young scientists to clearly communicate advanced concepts; the other was the necessity of unifying a class that was split right down the middle.
“The first class I tried it in was physical organic chemistry, which is required for both medicinal chemistry and organic chemistry grad students,” McNeil said. “The two groups want different things from the course, and they don’t often find much common ground for interaction.”
In the course, students were split into small groups, each of which submitted suggestions of three topics that related to the course material and weren’t already adequately described in Wikipedia—a free, online encyclopedia that anyone can edit. McNeil and Locke selected the final topics from the list, considering their importance and relevance to chemistry and giving highest priority to subjects for which there was little or no information on Wikipedia.
“The visibility appealed to them,” McNeil said. “Instead of doing a class presentation, where only the class benefits, everybody was excited that other people would see the results of their hard work, and that seemed to motivate them to work even harder to make sure their entries were accurate, well-written and understandable.”
Graduate student Lindsay Amos hopes to reach not only the millions of anonymous Wikipedia users out there, but also people in her own inner circle.
Since the first experience in 2008, McNeil and other chemistry faculty have used the Wikipedia project in five other courses, and the approach itself has gone through some revisions. For example, students now provide “peer review” feedback to one another at the outline and draft stages, pointing out problems with repetition, structure and flow. And, at the suggestion of one class member, McNeil and her graduate student instructor Cheryl Moy created a handbook that offers guidance in editing chemistry entries. Moy also is creating online video tutorials on editing Wikipedia.
The educators also enlisted a specialist in writing and rhetoric, professor Anne Gere, who holds joint appointments in the Department of English Language and Literature and the School of Education and directs the Sweetland Writing Center. Gere compared Wikipedia entries before and after student editing and concluded that the revised versions were much more engaging and accessible to nonspecialists, thanks to clear explanations and the inclusion of real-world examples, historical contexts and illustrations.
In early May, McNeil and Moy traveled to San Francisco to discuss the project at a meeting on using Wikipedia as a teaching tool.
“We were very excited about the work Anne McNeil has been doing with Wikipedia in her chemistry classes, so when we decided to bring together a small group of professors to the Wikimedia Foundation office to present and discuss their work with Wikipedia, Anne was the natural choice,” said Rod Dunican, the foundation’s education programs manager. “Anne and her graduate student Cheryl Moy shared with us their keen insights and the pitfalls and successes of using Wikipedia as a teaching tool. Through Anne’s classes, students at the University of Michigan greatly enhance the chemistry body of knowledge on Wikipedia.”
McNeil plans to try the Wikipedia assignment in an undergraduate honors course, where instead of advanced concepts in chemistry, students will work on entries about famous chemists and chemical reactions named for scientists.
By writing the article and creating the handbook, she hopes to encourage other chemistry professors to use Wikipedia projects in their classes.
“It’s a truly educational endeavor,” McNeil said. “The students learn a lot and they’re really proud of what they produce, but in the process they’re also improving the chemistry knowledge that’s out there in the world, which benefits the chemists who rely on these sites, as well as general readers seeking to broaden their knowledge.”
In addition to McNeil, the paper’s authors are Moy, Locke and Coppola. Funding was provided by the U-M IDEA Institute and the U.S. Department of Education.
*Source: University of Michigan
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