BUSINESS STUDENT COLLABORATIVE WORK
SUPPORTED BY MOODLE WIKI
Viktorija Sulčič
University of Primorska, Faculty of Management Koper, Slovenia
Keywords: e-Learning, Moodle, Wiki, Collaborative Work.
Abstract: The first part of the paper presents wiki as a Web 2.0 tool in general and also its potential use in the field of
education. Our presentation continues with our wiki experiences, particularly how wiki, as a module of
open-source learning management system Moodle, can support collaborative student work. The paper
concludes with the presentation of the research results of Moodle wiki usage by business school students.
Despite the fact that Moodle wiki is not as user-friendly as Media Wiki, it can successfully and efficiently
support student collaborative work.
1 INTRODUCTION
After the Tim Berners-Lee World-Wide-Web
revolution in the beginning of the nineties of the
previous century, the Internet became more
accessible to the general public. In 2004, the term
Web 2.0 was created as a result of the brainstorming
session between O’Reilly and MediaLive
International (O’Reilly 2005). In the last three years,
this phenomenon attracted a great deal of attention
(Nass and Levitt 2007, 4). Furthermore, Sonesh
(2005) talks about the second Internet revolution.
According to Whatis.com
1
, Web 2.0 is a term for
advanced Internet technology and applications
including blogs, wikis, RSS and social bookmarking.
Greater collaboration among Internet users, content
providers and enterprises is emphasized as the most
significant difference between Web 1.0 and Web 2.0
(ibidem). At this point, it should be noted that the
term Web 1.0 had not been used before the creation
of the term Web 2.0. According to Nass and Levitt
(2007, 4), the common characteristic of Web 2.0
technologies/concepts is its user centered nature.
Users can easily create content, publish it on the
Internet and share it with other users. Web 2.0
represents a different use of the Web, which is more
collaborative and more interactive.
Web 2.0 technologies, such as blogs and wikis,
are also widely adopted by businesses. Blogs and
1
http://whatis.techtarget.com/
wikis are useful for sharing of unstructured
information (Whatis.com) and supporting
collaborative work in working environments.
Nowadays, more and more enterprises write their
own blogs
2
. Richardson (2006, 62) discusses large
enterprises such as Disney
3
, McDonalds
4
, Sony
5
and
BMW
6
that use wikis in order to manage documents
and information. The extent of Web 2.0 technologies
usage in the business world influenced our decision
to implement Web 2.0 technologies in our course
curriculum. It is especially important that business
school students and graduates acquire knowledge
and skills related to the effective use of the
mentioned technologies. According to the fact (Dale
1969, 108) that learners remember more if they learn
from their own experience, Web 2.0 technologies
were implemented in a way that enabled students to
actively use these technologies in order to prepare
different tasks and assignments. We implemented
the use of blogs in two postgraduate courses that are
more research oriented. In these cases, students used
blogs to collect different resources, to collaborate,
and to develop new knowledge. For undergraduate
students, Wiki was implemented as a collaborative
tool in certain courses in the field of business
informatics. Due to the fact that Moodle is used as
the faculty official learning management system
2
http://www.asia.socialtext.net/bizblogs/index.cgi
3
http://disney.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page
4
http://mcdonalds.wikia.com/
5
http://sony.wikia.com/wiki/Main_Page
6
http://www.bmwwikiwiki.com/
213
Sul
ˇ
ci
ˇ
c V. (2010).
BUSINESS STUDENT COLLABORATIVE WORK SUPPORTED BY MOODLE WIKI.
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Computer Supported Education, pages 213-219
Copyright
c
SciTePress
(LMS), we decided to use Moodle wiki with the
purpose of supporting student teamwork.
The paper discusses our implementation of
Moodle wiki and its impact on teaching and
learning. Moodle wiki was used in the framework of
one obligatory undergraduate course and two
elective undergraduate courses. Furthermore,
Moodle wiki was used by students of one elective
postgraduate course during the time this paper was
written. The conclusion of the course is usually
followed by an evaluation of the course. The
evaluation questionnaire contained questions related
to the use of wiki. Obtained data was then used in
order to either confirm or reject the following
hypotheses:
wiki is a suitable tool for the support of student
collaborative teamwork and can substitute
classical teamwork performed in a classroom
wiki usage improves collaboration among
students and teachers
the quality of student assignments increases due
to the organization and transparency enabled by
wiki.
Data collected by the survey was processed with
SPPS program (ver. 17.0) and the results are
presented in tables and figures.
2 WIKIS
2.1 Wiki Development and its
Proliferation
Wiki was first used as an authoring tool used to
manage unstructured data by Ward Cunningham in
1995. The word »wiki-wiki« in Hawaiian means
»quick« (Richardson 2006, 59), which depicts the
nature of wiki that helps us manage content quickly
and easily. The most known wiki environment is
free multilingual encyclopaedia Wikipedia
7
, where
anyone from anywhere may contribute to its content.
The negative aspect of this Wikipedia freedom is
reflected in consequent scepticism, especially among
professionals, regarding the reliability of Wikipedia
content. Alex Halavais, professor at the University
of Buffalo, tested Wikipedia by entering 13 various
erroneous posts. All entered errors were fixed within
a couple of hours (Richardson 2006, 61). Quick
response to such attempts is one of the improved
features of Wikipedia. Richardson (2006, 61)
reported about a Wikipedia post regarding the Indian
Ocean earthquake that struck at the end of December
7
http://www.wikipedia.org/
2004. The first Wikipedia 76-word post was created
approximately 9 hours after the tragic event. In the
next 24 hours, the post was edited more than 400
times and had grown to approximately 3,000 words.
The photos, charts and other graphics were also
edited. Forty-eight hours after the first post, the post
had grown to over 6,500 words and had been edited
1,200 times. It is amazing how quickly such events
appear in the Wikipedia and how quickly the content
is edited, corrected or improved. Regardless, public
opinion about the trustworthiness of Wikipedia has
not significantly improved. Furthermore, certain
sceptics do not even change their opinion despite the
results of the comparison between Encyclopaedia
Britannica and Wikipedia performed by the
magazine Nature (Giles 2005). The comparison
concentrated on 43 posts from both encyclopaedias
and the results proved Wikipedia to be only slightly
less accurate than the commercial Encyclopaedia
Britannica.
Wikipedia is based on the fact that individuals
work and collaborate, even if they do not know each
other. Together they create entries that represent the
best effort of the entire group, and not merely the
contribution of a single person. The phenomenon
was described by Surowiecki (2005) as the wisdom
of crowds.
The number of posts in Wikipedia grows on a
daily basis
8
. At the end of February 2009, there were
2,762,158 posts in English Wikipedia (25. 2. 2009)
and by May of the same year, the number of content
pages reached 2,870,805 (7. 5. 2009). Over one
hundred thousand new content pages were added in
mere two months and a half.
Although Wikipedia is the most recognized wiki
environment, there are other interesting wikis
Wiktionary
9
, Wikiquote
10
, Wikibooks
11
etc. Some
wikis, like Wikipedia, are freely accessible and
anyone can contribute to its content. However,
certain profit and non-profit organizations use wiki
software in order to manage internal unstructured
data. There are over 100 wiki software applications
12
on the market and most of them are open sourced.
The most popular is MediaWiki
13
that was
developed to support free encyclopaedia Wikipedia.
In addition to its public use, MediaWiki can also be
used in restricted environments. For example,
MediaWiki has been used by United States
8
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Statistics
9
http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Wiktionary:Main_Page
10
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikiquote
11
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page
12
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_wiki_software
13
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MediaWiki
CSEDU 2010 - 2nd International Conference on Computer Supported Education
214
Intelligence Community (IC) since 2006.
Intellipedia
14
, as they named their wiki, is not freely
accessible and is used by IC analysts, working
groups and engineers to collaborate and share
unstructured data
15
. According to the IC report,
»Intellipedia provides a cost-effective platform to
access expertise whenever it resides across the IC«
16
.
2.2 Wiki in Education
In the previous chapter, we mentioned comparisons
performed between free and commercial
encyclopaedias. The comparison displayed that
Wikipedia is slightly less accurate than
Encyclopaedia Britannica. Although it has been
proven that the reliability of Wikipedia data is not as
low as presumed, teachers at all levels of education
warn students not to use Wikipedia's data as the
primary source for their assignments and projects.
Wikipedia's data may be used only as a starting point
and complemented by other more reliable sources of
information school textbooks, books, journals and
other printed or internet sources. The new challenge
dealing with the use of Wikipedia in education rose
from this doubt in the reliability of information
provided by Wikipedia. Students may test Wikipedia
data about a topic they are studying in class with the
use of other sources and consequently improve or
correct the Wikipedia content if they find any errors
or deficiencies as a part of their homework. They
can work either individually or in small groups.
Furthermore, students may post results of their
researches in the Wikipedia. With the usage of
wikis, students learn how to publish the content and
how to develop and use collaborative skills, they
learn to negotiate with others in order to agree on
correctness, meaning and relevance (Richardson
2006, 65).
Since wikis are easily accessible and all
information and data can easily be managed and
quickly updated, wikis may also be used as school
textbooks. This idea was realised by the California
Open Source Textbook Project (COSTP)
17
. The aim
of the COSTP project is to employ the advantages of
open source content and innovative licensing tools to
reduce California's K-12 textbook costs, to increase
their content and to avoid the shortages of K-12
14
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intellipedia
15
https://www.cia.gov/news-information/featured-story-
archive/2008-featured-story-archive/intellipedia-marks-
second-anniversary.html
16
https://www.cia.gov/news-information/featured-story-
archive/2008-featured-story-archive/intellipedia-marks-
second-anniversary.html
17
http://www.opensourcetext.org/index.htm
textbooks. Some of the freely accessible textbooks
from Wikibooks
18
can also be used in either real or
web based classrooms. Free access to a wide range
of textbooks is especially important for less
developed countries where there is a lack of
financial resources to prepare quality school
textbooks. However, the textbook language may
cause a serious obstacle in non-English speaking
countries.
Introducing wikis in the learning process is an
opportunity to introduce students to the concepts of
open source software, community collaboration,
respect for other people's ideas, intellectual property
etc. (Richardson 2006, 67).
Teacher may use wikis to take group lecture
notes, support group project management, perform
brainstorming, prepare content that will later be
published in others wikis, such as Wikipedia, and
support collaborative work between teachers and
employees (Cole and Foster 2007, 165-166).
In continuation, the use of wiki, as a tool to
support collaborative student work, is presented.
3 COLLABORATIVE WORK
WITH MOODLE WIKI
3.1 Student Collaborative Work
We have been using Moodle at our faculty from the
moment we decided to implement e-learning,
namely since the academic year of 2003/2004. We
started to experiment with Moodle in the framework
of the undergraduate course of e-business. E-
learning is a type of e-business; therefore, the e-
business course was the most appropriate course to
be performed online. Students would thus learn the
course topics through their own experiences using
the Internet technologies. The Internet technologies
were used even before Moodle has been selected as
the faculty’s learning platform. During the e-
business course, students prepare different group
assignments, which are individually graded and then
together compose the final course grade. Students
may work in groups in different ways. They may
prepare their group assignments working together in
the classical classrooms or they divide the
assignments among the members and then complete
the assignments at home. In the latter case, the group
leader combines the completed individual
assignments. Irrespective of the way the students
accomplish their group assignments two main pro-
18
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page
BUSINESS STUDENT COLLABORATIVE WORK SUPPORTED BY MOODLE WIKI
215
blems are presented:
the inactive students can easily be hidden by
active students who work instead of them. Active
students usually do not like to report the
inactivity of their colleagues.
submission of group assignments via e-mail
often causes problems students stated that the
assignments were mailed in time; however, the
teacher did not receive them in time.
Due to the above stated problems, we were
looking for different ways of supporting group work.
By introducing Moodle in the learning process, new
opportunities for the support of group work were
created. The students accomplished their
assignments through discussion in the Moodle
Forum; forum discussions were divided according to
the created groups. The group discussions may be
seen only by group members and by the teacher. At
the end of the week, the group leader wrote a
discussion summary and submitted it in the Moodle
activity Assignment. The teacher assessed the
discussion summary and only the students that were
involved in the forum discussion were rewarded
with points, which would add to their final grade. In
this way, we eliminated the possibility that inactive
students would be awarded undeserved points.
Sometimes, the group successfulness depends on
how the group leader is able to write the summary.
Since only the summary is assessed, it may occur
that the student may be assessed better if the partial
discussion would also be assessed. The discussion in
forums was monitored by a teacher who could, if
necessary, propose students to discuss a different
perspective or change the discussion in case they
were not on the right track. The students appreciated
the teacher’s involvement in student discussions. In
case the group discussions were very intense, the
group leader found it difficult to join the discussion
posts into a relevant summary that was assessed by
the teacher. Furthermore, tracing numerous student
discussions at courses with a large number of
students was fairly difficult for the teacher as well.
Therefore, it became necessary to find a new way of
supporting student group work. In 2007/2008, when
Moodle 1.6.5 was used, we decided to use the wiki
activity for this purpose. Moodle wiki in version
1.6.5 had a problem when two or more students
edited a single wiki page at the same time. Namely,
only the changes of the student who first saved the
edited wiki page were recorded. Changes made by
other students wiki authors, were lost. The
problem was serious, because students were not
notified that another user is already editing a
particular page. The error has been corrected with
the introduction of a new Moodle version. In
2008/2009, we started using the Moodle version
1.9.4 that was upgraded with user lock
announcement.
The feature of simultaneous multi-user editing,
as it occurs in GoogleDocs, is not possible in
Moodle wiki so far and it presents the main obstacle
for wider use of wiki among Moodle users.
3.2 Introducing Moodle Wiki in a
Business School
Moodle wiki was first introduced in the course of e-
business in 2007/2008. During the course
development, the guidelines for the creation of
student papers were prepared. The guidelines
contain several screen shots about wiki page editing
with emphasis on the wiki syntax. Furthermore, the
screen cast about wiki editing was recorded. During
the first face-to-face meeting, wiki usage was
presented by the teacher. However, in the next
academic year the mentioned face-to-face meeting
was not performed in some courses, because we
wanted to encourage the students to learn how to use
wiki by themselves. Students learn how to use
Moodle wiki from paper-based guidelines and from
screen cast, both available in the Moodle course.
Moodle wiki was implemented in three
undergraduate courses Business informatics, E-
business, E-learning and also in the course
Management of e-learning, which was carried out
for the postgraduate students. In the E-business
course, Moodle wiki was used to support all student
group activities, while in other courses Moodle wiki
was used only for the first activity where students
presented themselves. In all cases, the first Moodle
wiki page was prepared by the teacher (Figure 1).
Figure 1: The Moodle wiki first page.
In this way, the students could easily edit their
CSEDU 2010 - 2nd International Conference on Computer Supported Education
216
first Moodle wiki page by clicking on the question
mark and thus became more comfortable with wiki
editing. The mentioned guidelines and screen cast
helped them improve their first wiki pages in the
following days. Figure 2 displays that Group 1 has
already composed their first wiki page, while the
other groups have not yet started editing (question
mark next to the group name).
Students usually do not have any problems with
editing the wiki pages, because the editing process
and the toolbar are similar to editing and toolbar in
the most commonly used word processors (Figure
2). The wiki text can easily be formatted, external
URL may be added, and different wiki pages can
also be easily connected. The new wiki pages can be
created (and connected) by putting words between
square brackets ([]). When the target wiki page name
is not the same as the link word displayed on the
source wiki page, the vertical bar (|) is used to
separate text and the name of the target wiki page
19
(Figure 2).
Figure 2: Moodle wiki in edit mode.
Students who are skilled in HTML language can
also edit wiki pages in HTML code. Furthermore,
students can compose wiki content in different
HTML editors and then copy the content to the wiki
editing window in Moodle.
3.3 Group Work in Moodle Wiki
According to the E-business course curriculum, it is
expected that students prepare six different group
assignments. The course in Moodle is designed to be
performed in separate groups. This means that the
entire group work can be followed only by group
members and the teacher/tutor. The wiki activity is
performed in separate groups as well. Group
separation helps the teacher to focus easily on the
particular group activity and also on the activity of
19
The text “fairy tale hero“ contains the link to the wiki page
named “Peter Pan”.
each group member. The teacher prepares the wiki
front page that contains the basic guidelines for each
assignment (Figure 3). Detailed guidelines for each
assignment were delivered to students through
Moodle during each week.
Figure 3: Wiki front page.
Students were encouraged to write some draft
notes about their assignment at the beginning of the
week. They could also write notes about the planned
group assignment progress member tasks and due
dates. Any group member could add and correct the
wiki content at any time from anywhere. This wiki
feature was accepted really well by the students.
Furthermore, the teacher was able to review all these
notes and consequently intervene if the assignment
did not progress according to the study guidelines.
The wiki History view enables the teacher to view
the entire history of a particular wiki page who
edited what and when. Student participation in wiki
activity could also be monitored through Report
feature. Using History and Reports helps teacher
separate active students from inactive students and
award points only to those students who really
contributed to the group assignment work.
Despite all mentioned wiki advantages, the wiki
in Moodle 1.9.4 still has some disadvantages:
it is still not possible for two or more students to
edit a particular wiki page at the same time
wiki student activities cannot be assessed within
wiki. The Assignmentoff-line activity was used
to record the points students gained with their
wiki activity.
3.4 The Student Opinion
In the last week of each course performed online,
students are invited to fulfil the survey about the
course. For the students of the elective course (Table
1), a group of questions about the use of wiki, as
presented in chapter 3.2, was included in the survey.
BUSINESS STUDENT COLLABORATIVE WORK SUPPORTED BY MOODLE WIKI
217
Table 1: Students included in survey.
Academic year
Students enrolled
Survey response (in %)
2007/2008
56
83.9
2008/2009
60
81.7
In the first year of wiki usage (Table 2), more
students were not familiar with wiki (66.5%) than in
the second year of its usage (40.8%).
Table 2: Wiki opinion.
2007/2008
2008/2009
#
#
%
Prior to course
enrolment, I did not
know what wiki is.
31
20
40.8
Prior to course
enrolment, I had a
different image about
wiki.
12
20
40.8
My opinion about wiki
did not change after the
conclusion of the course.
4
9
18.4
Table 3: Wiki suitability for the preparation and
submission of assignments.
2007/2008
2008/2009
#
%
#
%
Wiki makes our work easier.
31
66.0
36
73.5
Preparing the assignments in
wiki is easier that it is in
Word.
11
23.4
10
20.4
Preparing the assignments in
Word would be easier.
5
10.6
1
2.0
I prefer to prepare an
assignment in Word.
2
4.1
Wiki was the main student activity used in the e-
business course to prepare the expected assignments
according to the course curriculum. The majority of
the students (80.9% respectively 81.6%) agreed that
wiki is an appropriate activity for the e-business
course (Table 4). Not a single student believed that
wiki is not an appropriate activity or it is too
difficult for e-business students.
Students improved their wiki assignments with
different external links on topic related web pages.
They also inserted different pictures and photos
related to the assignment content. Inserting picture
materials in wiki with the student role is not as
simple as it is with the teacher role. All picture
materials have to be published on the web if the
student would like to insert them in a particular wiki
Table 4: Wiki appropriateness for e-business course.
2007/2008
2008/2009
#
%
#
%
Wiki has to be used by the
next student generations.
38
80.9
40
81.6
Wiki is an appropriate
activity, but more
introduction regarding its
usage is necessary.
6
12.7
8
16.4
Wiki activity should only be
an elective course activity.
3
6.4
2
2.0
Wiki is not an appropriate
activity for the e-business
course.
/
/
/
/
Wiki activity is to difficult to
be used in the e-business
course.
/
/
/
/
page. However, the teacher can upload desired
pictures from his/her computer, while the student
role does not permit the insertion of a picture or a
photo from a personal computer. Some students used
other wiki design features (colour, different fonts,
tables etc.) in order to make their wiki pages more
interesting and impressive. At the end of the course,
the students were invited to assess their satisfaction
with the wiki design on a 5-degree scale (5=very
satisfactory, 1=not satisfactory). In the academic
year 2007/2008, the students assessed the wiki
design with 4.2 (SD=0.9, 95% confidence interval
4.04.4) and in 2008/2009 with 4.3 (SD=0.7, 95%
confidence interval 4.14.5).
The most exposed wiki feature was the
possibility of continual wiki content improvement
students were able to add, change and improve their
wiki content from anywhere and at any time.
Continuous teacher involvement in the learning
process helped students additionally improve their
wiki assignments. Students approved the wiki's
simplicity as well.
The students complained regarding the picture
insertion process. In the academic year 2007/2008,
we received a lot of complaints concerning the multi
user editing problems, where only the changes made
by the student who was the first to save a particular
wiki page were recorded, while changes made by
other students were lost without any previous
warning.
We would like to uncover the characteristics of
the students who favoured the use of wiki.
Therefore, a new variable from wiki suitability, were
added (Table 3), wiki appropriateness for e-business
course (Table 4) and student satisfaction with wiki
design, was composed. With the use of correlation
CSEDU 2010 - 2nd International Conference on Computer Supported Education
218
analysis, we found that students who favoured wikis
also favoured online study and did not have any
problems with regular weekly activities. Both
correlations were statistically significant.
4 CONCLUSIONS
The first positive experience from both, student and
teacher perspective influenced the decision
regarding the use of wiki in the elective course as a
managing tool for unstructured data in the second
year. Moodle wiki can be used by a very small
closed group of users, which offers users (students)
more privacy and more confidence in their
preparation of assignments.
Based on the data analysis, we can conclude that
wiki is a suitable tool for the support of student
group work in an online environment and can easily
replace off-line group work activity. More than 80%
of the students included in the research agreed that
editing wiki improved collaboration among students
and also cooperation between the teacher and the
students if the teacher was actively present in the
online course. The teacher is able to monitor student
progress in the assignment preparation process and
he/she can guide the students to follow study guides
more carefully and therefore improve their
assignments. Using wikis to accomplish the
assignments helps students prepare more quality
work than they were able following the classical
way.
Uncovering inactive students was approved by
the students and motivated them to become more
involved in the group work, since the online groups
work better than do groups in a live environment.
In the next Moodle version, wiki should be
improved even more. The most desired feature is the
possibility that two or more users could not edit a
particular wiki page at the same time. The wiki
assignment ability will thus become a desired
teacher feature as well.
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