Jennifer, I haven't used a traditional text in my theatre history courses for several years relaying instead on excerpts and condensed version of my lecture notes. I have been very happy with this and have not had any student complaints. As for Wikis, I'm going to give them a try this Fall. Each team will be responsible for two Wikis (one dealing with a play read by everyone in the class and the second with a movement/"ism"). Students not on the teams creating each Wiki will be required to ask questions/post comments on each Wiki. I've not worked with Wikis before so I expect it to fall somewhere between "crash-and-burn" and "glorious success." Tim On Jul 13, 2010, at 4:13 PM, Jennifer Imazeki wrote: > I've been wondering about this issue as well, especially since I won't > be using a traditional textbook. I had been planning to use something > like the powerpoints Lori mentioned. But one idea I'm kicking around > is using a wiki and having the students 'create' the notes themselves. > Has anyone done anything like that? Even if you haven't, do you think > it would work? > > Jennifer > **************************** > Jennifer Imazeki > Department of Economics > San Diego State University > homepage: http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/~jimazeki/ > Economics for Teachers blog: http://economicsforteachers.blogspot.com > Timothy D. Connors Professor of Theatre Central Michigan University Office/Voice: 989-774-3815 Fax: 989-774-2498