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WGS 300W: "Foundational overviews of the history of feminist theory. Also addresses contemporary ethnic minority and international theorists"
Project #1: Wikipedia AKA become an expert on a feminist field
a) chose one field of feminist theory/inquiry/analysis to become an expert on. Extensively research using book references, scholarly articles in library databases, and online research. Turn in a detailed works referenced page showing the sources you used to become an expert. Standard reference page format (APA, MLA, or Chicago) is required.
b) Create a Wikipedia account, log in to our class page, attach your name to your chosen page, and complete the required tutorials listed on the page. They will tell you how to edit, how to install beta editor, how to work in the sandbox, and very importantly, the writing policies that will help your post to remain posted.
c) Go to the Wikipedia page for your field (or start one if none exists) and carefully check the page for inaccuracies, areas to expand and new information to offer, and new citations to add. I suggest you past the entry into a word program and outline/make notations on it as you check on items.
d) When you are ready, work in the sandbox to draft the sections or add to the Wikipedia entry with beta editor. Note: if you work in the sandbox, make sure you submit it! To take an immediate screen shot of your work. Show me either on the Word doc or the screen shot with an outline/highlight/notation of what things you confirmed, what things you changed, and what things you added. This must be done before you come to class on October 7. Double check that your entry is posted and publicly available.
e) During week 7, each student will briefly explain their field to the class and discuss what they did on their Wikipedia entry (about 5 minutes each).
f) By October 19, you must interact with and respond to any feedback I or Wikipedia editors give to fix or change parts of the entry. You do not have to follow all feedback to the letter, but you do need to make sure things are properly submitted and that you have done due diligence to make sure your entry is not erased, is finished, and is accurate.
Your grade is based on the extent of your research as shown in your works referenced, the quality and breadth of work on Wikipedia, and the quality of your interaction and correction of issues as requested.
Late Work Policy: Wikipedia projects can be turned in/finished to one week (6 days) late for half the credit of the earned grade.
In class we will discuss the sources you are required to access and compile for this project.
On you own:
Be sure to read through this
Editing Wikipedia PDF handout and
this one, which is specific to editing in the field of Women's Studies.
1. Black Feminism
2. Material(ist) Feminism
3. Queer Theory**
4. Transnational Feminism**
5. Feminist Film Theory
6. Radical Feminism
7. Ecofeminism
8. Second Wave Feminism
9. Third Wave Feminism
10. Postcolonial Feminism
11. Feminist Research Methods/methodology*
12. Feminist Pedagogy
13. Marxist Feminism
14. Indigenous Feminism
15. Chicana Feminism
16. Liberal Feminism
17. Feminist Literary Criticism
18. Feminist Philosophy
19. Feminist Empiricism
20. Feminist Theology
21. Feminist geography
22. Feminist history
23. Feminist sexology
24. feminist legal theory
25. fat feminism
26. feminist technoscience
27. transfeminism
Please note: this list is NOT a comprehensive list of feminist fields! If you are interested in a feminist field that is not on this list, by all means ask me if you can do it!
These links are on our BB Learn page as well:
Wikipedia overview on class projects and advice for students
Wikipedia core content policies
Wikipedia manual of style guide
Adding wikipedia visual editor
This week, everyone should have a Wikipedia account, have attached to our course page and signed up to your chosen field found on the Students tab
Compile a list of relevant, reliable books, journal articles, or other sources. You will be turning this in as evidence of your research.
If you want, post that bibliography to the talk page of the article you'll be working on, and in your sandbox. Make sure to check in on the Talk page to see if anyone has advice on your bibliography. This will get you used to how to check for feedback.
Go over your wikipedia article. Read it for content and begin to compare the article to the other sources of information you encountered. Are there things that you read in multiple places elsewhere that are not in the article? Are there statements made that you can directly cite from your sources? Are there problematic words or opinions-based ideas? Does the entry accurately reflect the people and ideas that make up the field? Take notes on places you want to work on or expand.
You've picked a topic, found your sources, and evaluated what ways you want to improve or expand your article. Now it's time to start writing.
Creating a new article?
Improving an existing article?
Resources:
Editing Wikipedia pages 7–9
Editing an existing article?
Creating a new article?
Do additional research and writing to make further improvements to your article.
Continue to expand and improve your work, and format your article to match Wikipedia's tone and standards. Remember to contact your Content Expert at any time if you need further help!
Attach this to the back of the hard copy of your article markup.
Printouts that highlight and detail the changes/additions you made are due in hard copy. Double check that you have actually made the changes to the page itself and your work is not waiting to be submitted in sandbox.
Please remember that quality NOT quantity is desired. If you made very few changes, you may submit a narrative and explain what was done well in the article. If this is the case, consider contributing to the article's rating.
Make sure you respond to all editor feedback in talk messages. Check and see what has been requested or deleted from your article. Fix links, content, etc as requested. If there are large issues, engage in a dialogue on the talk page.
Check my feedback and make requested changes as well.