m (<center> The Purdue Kiwi <br><br> A multidimensional, multimedia, self-adaptive, collective learning tool.)
 
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= <center> The Purdue Kiwi <br><br> A multidimensional,  multimedia, self-adaptive, collective learning tool.=
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= <center> [[Image:KiwiLogoCrop_OldKiwi.png|300px]] <br>A multidimensional,  multimedia, self-adaptive, collective learning tool.=
  
  
'''Current Course List'''
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==='''Kiwi was version 1.0 of a new student-driven learning tool developed by [http://www.ece.purdue.edu/~mboutin Prof. Mimi Boutin]. It retired in August 2008 when we moved to a new server and software. Kiwi was created and developed by Dennis Snell, William Ehlhardt, Deen King-Smith, Stephen Rudolph and many other students. Thanks to all for their efforts and see you on [http://kiwi.ecn.purdue.edu Rhea]! '''===
  
* [[ECE301_OldKiwi]]
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* [[ECE438_OldKiwi]]
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* [[ECE662_OldKiwi]]
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* [[ECE637_OldKiwi]]
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'''About Kiwi '''
  
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* [[Kiwi:About|What is kiwi?]]
* What is a Kiwi?
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A “Kiwi” is a student-driven internet-based learning tool developed by [http://www.ece.purdue.edu/~mboutin Mimi]. More precisely, it is a repository of linked multimedia content collectively created by students.  The design and underlying software are also controlled by students.
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* [[Howtoparticipate_OldKiwi|How to participate]]  
  
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* [https://engineering.purdue.edu/~kiwi/Index.html The Ratite Project Page]
  
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* [[BehindKiwiProject_OldKiwi| Who is behind all this?]]
  
* Why the name “Kiwi”?
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* [[IdeasForInstructors_OldKiwi| I am a Purdue instructor, how can I use Kiwi in my class?]]
  
Because, in a sense, the Kiwi is the opposite of a wiki page in Wikipedia: while the goal of a wiki page is to have supposedly knowledgeable people collectively build an authoritative reference on a subject, the goal of the kiwi is to have people who, a priori, know nothing about a subject collectively build their own learning resource.
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* [[KiwiVideo_OldKiwi| Kiwi Instructional Video]]
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'''Courses'''
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Please do not create any more courses here. Instead, email mcwalker at purdue to get your own course wiki on [http://kiwi.ecn.purdue.edu Rhea].
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* [[ECE301:ECE301_OldKiwi|ECE301]]
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* [[ECE302:ECE302_OldKiwi|ECE302]]
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* [[ECE438:ECE438_OldKiwi|ECE438]]
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* [[ECE462:ECE462_OldKiwi|ECE462]]
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* [[ECE637:ECE637_OldKiwi|ECE637]]
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* [[ECE662:ECE662_OldKiwi|ECE662]]
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* [[ECE490W:ECE490W_OldKiwi|ECE490W]]
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* [[ECE602:ECE602_OldKiwi| ECE602 ]]
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* [[MA553:MA553_OldKiwi| MA553 ]]
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* [[MA544:MA544_OldKiwi| MA544]]
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'''Others'''
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* Articles requiring cleanup: [[:Category:Cleanup_OldKiwi]]
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* [[QE:HKN QE|HKN QE]]
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* [http://www.stdout.org/~winston/latex/ LaTeX Cheat Sheet]
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* [[How to get through math grad school at Purdue_OldKiwi]]

Latest revision as of 09:59, 29 August 2008


KiwiLogoCrop OldKiwi.png
A multidimensional, multimedia, self-adaptive, collective learning tool.

Kiwi was version 1.0 of a new student-driven learning tool developed by Prof. Mimi Boutin. It retired in August 2008 when we moved to a new server and software. Kiwi was created and developed by Dennis Snell, William Ehlhardt, Deen King-Smith, Stephen Rudolph and many other students. Thanks to all for their efforts and see you on Rhea!

About Kiwi


Courses

Please do not create any more courses here. Instead, email mcwalker at purdue to get your own course wiki on Rhea.


Others

Alumni Liaison

Abstract algebra continues the conceptual developments of linear algebra, on an even grander scale.

Dr. Paul Garrett