Draft proposal: Using Wikipedia in Young Offenders' Institutions
Project proposal: Using Wikipedia in Young Offenders' Institutions
This short paper outlines a potential project utilising the Kiwix offline version of Wikipedia within educational programs in Young Offenders' Institutions.
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Introduction
At the EduWiki Conference 2013 in Cardiff Muriel Staub from Wikimedia Switzerland gave a presentation examining the potential uses of the Kiwix offline version of Wikipedia. One of the projects that Muriel mentioned was a pilot scheme in a small Swiss prison. The scheme involved uploading the offline version of Wikipedia to the computers of inmates (which they lease or buy from the prison authorities). There was a small cohort of prisoners in the study (18) and the project was designed to encourage them to learn using Wikipedia, with a view to cultivating them as potential future contributors. This presentation inspired the proposal below. There is also a basic presentation document from Wikimedia Switzerland here and a short abstract of their project here.
About Kiwix
Put simply and briefly, Kiwix is a content reader that can be utilised on most major software platforms, including Android, Windows and iOS. Once downloaded, Kiwix provides a list of content links that the user can access to download freely licensed content, such as Wikipedia in various languages (as well as the content from other Wikimedia projects). This content can then be viewed offline, with no need for an internet connection. This makes it incredibly useful for environments where there is no available internet connection, whether due to lack of infrastructure or through design.
The current version of the offline “Wikipedia for Schools” contains around 47,000 articles across a broad spectrum of educational topics. Its use is entirely free and the content can be reused, shared and modified freely for any purpose as it is released under a Creative Commons–Attribution-Share Alike license 3.0 (CC-BY-SA)
Proposal
This project would be a pilot in which the use of an offline version of Wikipedia is embedded into an education programme that is delivered within young offenders' institutions in the UK.
It is estimated that around 150,000 children and young people enter the youth justice system every year. Many of these young people have a background of little educational attainment, often coupled with other socio-economic factors, which can act as a driver to offending behaviour. It costs around £100,000 per year for a youth custodial place, sometimes reaching as much as £200,000. Re-offending rates are also high, currently running at around 73%. As many as half of 15-17 year-olds within the youth justice system have reading levels assessed as being equivalent to those of 7-11 year-old children.
With such high re-offending rates and low educational outcomes it is clear that changes to educational programs offered to young offenders may deliver positive benefits to both of those outcomes. Embedding the use of such a vast, free educational resource within these educational programs would empower young people by giving them access to vast amounts of knowledge.
Thoughtful use of Wikipedia as a teaching tool, leading on to teaching how to edit Wikipedia (or any other MediaWiki site, such as one built by the young people themselves using MediaWiki Vagrant, a locally stored, offline version of MediaWiki) is also an excellent way of sharing skills that essential in the digital age, such as computer literacy, research skills, understanding what make a source credible or otherwise and so on – a package of skills known as digital fluency.
Implementation
For the project to work effectively there would need to be a properly developed educational course that makes use of both the Kiwix offline version of Wikipedia and the MediaWiki Vagrant offline development environment. This would need to be done in partnership between education experts, experts in the use of Wikipedia and people with an understanding of educational programmes in young offenders' institutes.
I have a meeting arranged with a representative of CfBT Education Trust who currently deliver educational programs in three young offenders' institutes, including Feltham A. I am also in the process of making contact with Only Connect and the Howard League for Penal Reform in order to understand these elements as thoroughly as possible and explore the potential for collaboration.
Metrics
As with any project carried out by Wikimedia UK, metrics for this project are vital. These will develop over time. Figures relevant to educational attainment and skills learned through the current education programmes would be used as appropriate benchmark figures against which to record the success or otherwise of any pilot project.
Updates
As the proposal develops and more information becomes available this page will be updated accordingly.