Projects Step by Step Guide

Introduction[edit | edit source]

You have decided to get involved in a project with Physiopedia, what's next?

As a project lead you are responsible for developing the parameters of the project with Physiopedia. The project can be for students, clinicians, colleagues or all of the above.

Any educational establishment, accredited clinic or professional health organisation providing physiotherapy or physical therapy education is suited to running a Content Development Project with their students and/or colleagues.

Getting Started[edit | edit source]

Firstly, you need to decide what kind of project best suits you and your organisation. As a reminder, we have three main types of Content Development Projects:

  • Educational Projects - involving educational establishments for pre and post graduate students as part of their formal university or college education.
  • Professional Organisation Projects - run by professional organisations and involving their members for professional development opportunities.
  • Clinical Projects - led by clinics as professional development projects for staff and visiting students.

The second step includes contacting us to let us know your interests. If you are not sure about what type of project or subject you would like to pursue, please reach out to us, we are bursting with ideas. We are here to support you all the way!

From your interests, we will discuss your needs and together formulate a suitable project. We will then ask you for some information relating to your project and with this we will set up your Project Page. These will include:

  • Project description
  • Project Instructors
  • Objectives
  • Start and finish dates
  • Instructions to students
  • Articles (to be worked on by students and / or editing members only)

Next you will need your own Physiopedia account....

Get Your Own Physiopedia Account[edit | edit source]

Sign up for a Physiopedia account for yourself using the Request Account page.

When you request your account just let us know in the 'Additional Information' box that you wish to set up a project in Physiopedia.

You will receive an email asking you to confirm your email address.  Once you have done this wait for another email informing you that your account has been activated.  This is a manual process and may take a few days.

Next you should familiarise yourself with editing Physiopedia...

Familiarise Yourself With Editing[edit | edit source]

Our main recommendation for anyone supporting a Content Development Project in Physiopedia is to become familiar yourself with making edits to pages. The best way to do this is by editing your own Profile Page and familiarise yourself with making edits on the site. If you need help with any of this you can refer to the User Tutorials.

It is also worth becoming familiar with creating new pages, adding them as links to your Project Page and adding a Template to those new pages for the students to work from.

It is also useful for you to know how to add references and videos so that you can help students / colleagues with these.  You can practice any of this in the Sandbox.

After editing your Profile page, it is a good idea for you to create a new page in Physiopedia which you can direct your students to as a standard that you would like to see. See the articles from the Texas State Project as an example of some great pages, they even created their own images and videos!

Before your students / colleagues start on their Content Development Project, they will need their own Physiopedia account...

Get Your Students / Colleagues a Physiopedia Account[edit | edit source]

Get your students / colleagues to sign up for a Physiopedia account by requesting an account as you did.  They need to use their full name for their username.

When they request their account, they should inform us in the additional information box that they are working in Physiopedia under your instruction as part of the project.

As you did they will receive an email asking them to confirm their email address. Once they have done this they should wait for another email informing them that your account has been activated.  Again, this is a manual process and may take a few days.

Once their account has been activated they are ready to familiarise themselves with making edits on the site...

Initial Familiarisation Session[edit | edit source]

Feedback from previous projects always recognise the benefits of an initial face-to-face familiarisation session.  So, before your students get to work on creating the articles that you tasked them with, it is a good idea to have a familiarisation session. Use this session to go through editing Profile pages and getting familiar with editing pages, just as you have done. Alternatively, send them a copy of the section "Familiarise yourself with editing" above.

If you and your students become familiar with editing Physiopedia in this way at the start of your Project the whole experience will become much easier instead of a technological challenge!

Next, you need to set your students / colleagues about their task...

Instruct Your Students / Colleagues What to Do in Physiopedia[edit | edit source]

Next you should provide your students / colleagues with tasks to complete in Physiopedia. You should have already decided what the tasks are going to be and they should be written on your project page.

You should set a time frame for the completion of the tasks and project.

You can use your Project Page that has been set up for you in Physiopedia, to display the instructions to your students / colleagues so that they have somewhere to refer to.

Once you know what pages your students will be working on please let us know and we will protect those pages from edits from other users by putting a notice at the top of the page asking people not to edit the page until the project is complete.  Alternatively, we can provide you with the code to add this to the top of the page yourself.

Following the Progress[edit | edit source]

You can follow your students / colleagues contributions and progress in a number of ways:

  1. Each Physiopedia page has a History (under Edit) where you can view how various users have contributed on a specific page.  These pages show who made what contributions and when.
  2. You can flag pages your students / colleagues are working on by using the Watch link at the top of each page. The pages that you are 'watching' can be followed by going to My watchlist (under Tools).
  3. You can also track individual user contributions by visiting their profile page and clicking on User contributions (Under Tools). To find a persons profile page you can go to the User List and search for your student / colleague in the alphabetical list of users, click on their name.

Providing Feedback[edit | edit source]

If you would like to provide feedback to your students / colleagues as they are working on their articles you can do this by using the Discussion page that is associated with the page that they are working on.  This feedback will be public.

Finishing the Project[edit | edit source]

Once the project is complete and has been assessed please let us know so that we can network the pages fully into the Physiopedia website.  This means that we will remove the notice that asks people to refrain from editing the pages and link it into the site so that it can be easily found.

Provide Feedback to Us[edit | edit source]

We would be grateful if you would provide us with feedback of your experience of using Physiopedia in your teaching.  We will use this feedback to improve Physiopedia as a teaching and learning tool for educators, clinicians and for students.  When the project is complete we will contact you and send you a link to our feedback form. You can always provide us with your feedback by email prior to this. We look forward to hearing from you.