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Hi Everyone

I would like to build a wiki based website about professors, so that students can share information and check the reputation of the professor before working for him.

The idea will be:

  • every professor has its own wikipage ( I guess any wiki software should do that)
  • visitors should be able to rate that professor, or technically, rate that particular wikipage. The rating could be as simple as leaving a comment or giving 1 to 5 stars
  • the comments or rating has to be anonymous to protect privacy

I am just a poor graduate student who wants to warn prospective students that some professors are too tough to work for.

Any advice will be highly appreciated.

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Ummm, doesn't a fairly popular website already do all this? And this is not really a question so don't be surprised if it is not received well. – MitMaro Jul 24 at 7:34
The question can be generalized as that I want to find a solution that combines a wiki and a rating system, which seems non-exist ... – Peter Jul 24 at 17:11

2 Answers

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I know I'm going to get flamed for posting what isn't an answer (or at least not the one you are looking for), but I feel so strongly about this that I can't help myself.

Don't do it

  • You're risking destroying the reputation of a professor because a bunch of anonymous people downvoted him/her
  • People can downvote someone in privacy, and without justification
  • Students are now reliant upon (unjustified) opinion from people they may not even have met to determine who they should work with
  • What works for one student won't work for another.

Have a look online at the consensus about ratemyteacher; some very interesting reading.

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Why not? Such systems already exist in some universities. Whereas the rating is not connected with a particular student, the comments are, but the interested professors can't see those relationships. I saw such system in action and I must say that good professors should have nothing to worry about, even if their style does not suit all the students. – Zyx Jul 24 at 7:54
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I would like to add one point to the list of "don't do it": It is forbidden in many countries where privacy means something. – mouviciel Jul 24 at 8:07
That systems exist isn't testament to their validity, though it's interesting that you've seen this in action and think it worked well. Why is anonymity of students important (i.e. why can't professors know who said what - which is what would happen if the student spoke about his reservations to the professor's face)? – butterchicken Jul 24 at 8:09
Well, it's all about the human nature to prevent the situations, when a professors favourizes or discriminates one or more students because of their notes and comments. The system was intended to show the professors, what they should improve in their job and what the students complain about and the students were obliged to vote. And if the student said about his/her comment to the professor... well, it's his or her potential problem :). – Zyx Jul 24 at 8:42
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If it were only about presenting the professors and some facts about them, I would recommend MediaWiki. Good and well-known text formatting, many personalization features, lots of extensions and so on. On my faculty, the students established such wiki on DokuWiki, but it is for student's use only and the professors have no access to it.

I don't know any wiki system that offers rating and a convenient and reliable system of anonymous comments. Perhaps there is something like this for MediaWiki in their extension directory, but I think that in this place wiki is not a good system for such system anymore.

I saw a working platform for rating professors and it was a dedicated web application written for this purpose. Furthermore, the students could not watch the professor's results and the comments of other students.

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