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Again, welcome! Nikkimaria (talk) 21:51, 23 April 2012 (UTC)
Responded on my talk, SandyGeorgia (Talk) 03:26, 24 April 2012 (UTC)
Hi, SandyGeorgia recently told me that you and your class worked on an article this term. We really appreciate your contribution! Although I'm not a specialist in this area like Sandy (and so not well-equipped to evaluate quality of sources, etc.) I wanted to let you know of some resources here on Wikipedia for instructors for your future reference. Wikipedia:School and university projects provides an overview of courses using Wikipedia and some advice for instructors. If you're located in certain nations such as the US, Canada, or Brazil, the Wikipedia Education Program provides resources that may help your class to be more successful, including volunteer assistance.
The most immediate feedback I'd give you is that it's important for each student to create their own account when editing, both for legal reasons (to ensure that their contribution is released under a free license), and so that we know who to talk to when a specific piece of text has an issue. Even if each student has an account, you can still collaborate on a single document in your sandbox together, and you have the opportunity to revise the final version. It's also important to review student contributions to make sure they're not copying text from sources, since this is a copyright violation and such text will be removed.
I would also like to learn more about your course - where is it based, what topic does it teach, and so on? Thank you! Dcoetzee 20:59, 24 April 2012 (UTC)