Pages that link to "Submissions"
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
The following pages link to Submissions:
Displayed 20 items.
View (previous 20 | next 20) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Submissions:2016/Reader study results: what reader qualities impacts reading behavior? (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Wikidata editathon (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Building a Public History of HIV/AIDS in New York City: The Pedagogical Relationship of Wikipedia and the Archives (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Public Policy Advocacy Across Both Coasts (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Welcoming and Helping New Editors: A Month at the Teahouse (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Hardware Open Systems Technologies (← links)
- Submissions:2016/The Sad, Sad Story of Social Wikipedia (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Wiki Ed's Year of Science: What's worked so far, and where we go from here (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Guide to editathons at cultural institutions (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Wikipedia Cuba: Challenges and Opportunities (← links)
- Submissions:2016/GLAM program in Mexico: the benefits and challenges of collaboration with the public cultural sector (← links)
- Submissions:2016/ReHumanizingHaiti or The Role of Technology and Social Media in Language Activism/Advocacy for Historically Undervalued Languages (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Contributions as Coursework: What roles does Wikipedia play for the students? (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Transforming Wikipedia into a Legitimate Academic Resource for Undergraduate Students (← links)
- Submissions:2016/A Review of the First Year: Wikipedian in Residence for Gender Equity (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Why Plagiarism Matters (← links)
- Submissions:2016/How Machine Learning will Change the Way you Think (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Composition at a Crossroads: Teaching College Writing with Wikipedia (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Linking a controlled subject vocabulary to Wikipedia (← links)
- Submissions:2016/Of Dead Authors and Digital Natives: a critical survey of studies on Wikis as classroom tools, and what WikiMedia educational initiatives can learn from them (← links)