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Wikipedia Education Program/Handout: How to grade Wikipedia assignments

From Outreach Wiki

Finding a good way to grade assignments is one of the central challenges reported by instructors who have worked with the Wikipedia Ambassador Program so far. A range of grading rubrics have worked for instructors in the past, including:

  • Student blogging – regular blog posts throughout the term, based on a short prompt every week or two
  • Reflective papers – a short paper explaining and reflecting on students' work on Wikipedia, which serves as a lens to evaluate
  • Portfolio – students collect accounts of their major contributions (with links showing their work), their significant interactions with classmates and the Wikipedia community, and their reflections on the assignment
  • Presentation (individual or group) – students show the rest of the class what they did and how their articles evolved
  • Peer reviews – students evaluate each others' work on Wikipedia, leaving reviews for each other on or off the site
  • Wikipedia quality assessment tools – Wikipedia's system for evaluating article quality can be used to measure progress on students' articles
  • Size of contribution – grade students on the sheer amount of material they add to Wikipedia, easily calculated using Wikipedia's many automated tools
  • Article history – compare what an article looked like before and after a student worked on it, using the article history
  • Student contribution history – Wikipedia keeps a detailed record of every contribution made by each user, and some basic tools are available to make sense of contribution histories

Some selection of these methods is typically used in combination. For example, the following grading rubric has been successful for classes with major Wikipedia assignments:

  • 5% each (x4): Participation grade for early Wikipedia exercises
  • 10%: Participation in Wikipedia discussions in class
  • 10%: Peer reviews and collaboration with classmates
  • 50%: Quality of your main Wikipedia contributions, evaluated in light of your reflective essay
  • 10%: Reflective essay