Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/Cleveland State University/Global Interconnections (Spring 2024)
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- Course name
- Global Interconnections
- Institution
- Cleveland State University
- Instructor
- Shelley Rose
- Wikipedia Expert
- Ian (Wiki Ed)
- Subject
- History
- Course dates
- 2024-01-16 00:00:00 UTC – 2024-05-02 23:59:59 UTC
- Approximate number of student editors
- 20
For our Wikipedia assignment we will focus on the creation of narratives for the public (in this case as encyclopedia entries). Each article will relate to a play being staged in Feb/March at CSU called Ancestra. Students will choose from a curated list of topics related to the historical events in the play. This is also an opportunity for future high school teachers to engage with Wikipedia as pedagogy.
"This course explores the discipline of world history by highlighting the interconnections between societies and peoples. A primary focus of this course is the way in which historians and social studies teachers define world history for scholarly discussions and in their own classrooms. The course is not chronological- it is framed by various themes and categories associated with studying world history. Students will be encouraged to think beyond their experiences with American history or western civilization courses to recognize the linkages between historical events and trends around the world. Students will evaluate broader processes of globalization, such as the effects of increasing communication speed and mobility in diverse national contexts, as well as the contribution of these trends to developing transnational communities. This course does not attempt to cover the entire world. It focuses instead on key sites of integration and change such as the emergence of the modern nation/state, labor migrations, trade routes, colonial expansion, revolutions, gender relationships, social movements, religion and the languages of rights. Students will learn to develop their own analytical arguments and interpret written, oral, and material sources over the course of the semester. In addition, students preparing for careers in teaching will learn to transfer this knowledge successfully into a secondary school classroom."