Expanding Content

A good guideline. Are there any new projects that could fit under this principle. Or are there some projects that could be operated in different ways for that purpose?

For example I think that the creation of new article pages that are searchable are a perfectly good way for achiveing the purposes of Wikipedia and Wiktionary. But for a project like Wikiversity I think that ain't enough. It is to difficult to navigate for most potential users. If I where a teacher that intended to build my courses around Wikiversity material, I think I would have needed a better way of finding what courses that fulfilled the course requirements for the course I intended to give. In a project like Wikiversity I think a higher layer of structure is needed, there is a need to compile coursepackages that teachers can trust to cover all the areas their students are supposed to learn.

At the moment I don't realy know if there is material on Wikiversity that is of high quality enough to serve as course literature at any level, but anyway I don't think the quality is the main problem, but rather that it is to hard for the teacher to evaluate what material that has the needed quality. Wikiversity might already serve the purpose of providing free courses that can be used to educate an interested individual. But if a higher level of evaluation of the courses could be implemented, then proposals like Proposal:Supporting_Third_world_education could be served at a few clicks on the mouse.

So I think it also is important to consider whether some projects could be operated in a slightly different way.

Dafer4520:24, 17 March 2010