Content workflow
NOTE: The contents of this page are not set in stone, and are subject to change! This page is a draft in active flux ... |
Idea
Some examples of ideas are...
- Wouldn't it be great if there was an open resource to teach children how to do X?
- I loved this book as a kid... I wish something like it was available to kids in other countries.
- I made this thing - I wonder if it's useful to other students for learning?
Finding
Going on a content hunt
Gather your picks and shovels
- Open your favorite browser window (or several).
- Open your favorite text editor as a scratch pad, you'll want to copy/paste links from the browser and make notes.
- Simply relying on browser history or bookmarking is probably not the best strategy, you'll want to capture your findings and get them recorded on the wiki at the end of your search. Editing directly into a wiki page is also less-than-ideal as you don't want to get distracted by formating and the like while the hunt is on.
- If you are doing this collaboratively (in real-time) you'll probably want to open an IRC chat session on a suitable channel.
Focused content hunt
You've got an idea of what sort of content you want to find.
Searching with your favorite search engine on carefully chosen terms is likely to return a lot of links, and you can't necessarily visit them all. One good strategy is to use this search to find super-nodes from which to do more focused browsing. For health and science content: government agencies/ministries, NGO's, patient and research advocacy groups and universities are all likely to have produced suitable content or gathered together links to high-quality content. Furthermore, as these are all generally non-profit organizations, the chances of finding content that is (or can be) made available under suitable licensing terms are substantially improved.
Surprise content discovery
Sometimes when you are looking for one thing, you stumble across something else entirely. Serendipity is a wonderful thing. Open a fresh text window and paste the link with some notes on topic, copyright, that will allow you (or someone else) pick up that thread. If you working collabaratively with a group on a focused content hunt, it's best not to get distracted by another topic, no matter how rich a vein of content you've found; but don't lose track of it either. It could become the starting point of a new focused content hunt you launch later on, or you can drop it onto an appropriate wiki page for someone else to follow up.
Existing materials
Source materials
Collaborators
Reviewers
Users
Creation
Brainstorming
Drafting
Editing
Useful tools
- plaintext editors
- inkscape
- wiki
Curation
Categorization
Bundling
What teachers are looking for
Adaptation
How to transform existing works into something new, and how to make your work something other people will transform.
Licensing
Translation
Editing
Creating new works
Deployment
How to get your stuff actually tested with real kids in a classroom.
Feedback
How to get it, encourage it, and react to it.