CZ:Guidel 2008 summer course on Music and Brain

From Citizendium
Revision as of 05:33, 10 June 2008 by imported>Daniel Mietchen (started)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

The course is organized by Daniel Mietchen (CZ page/ lab page) and Stefan Koelsch (lab page).


This page serves as a central clearing house for the Music and Brain course at the Guidel 2008 summer academy.

The assignment is to create an encyclopedic entry about a topic relevant to music perception and cognition for Citizendium.

Despite English being CZ's official language, German will be allowed on this page and its subpages, as it is the language of the course.



Schedule

30 June 2008 -- Topic selection due

31 July 2008 -- Rough draft due

31 August 2008 -- Final draft due

7-20 September 2008 -- Guidel summer academy


Assignment instructions

See CZ:Assignment instructions for detailed instuctions on this assignment; CZ:How to edit an article gives general instructions on how to edit Citizendium pages.

If you want to make sure no other Citizendium authors or editors does anything to your article while you are working on it, add this text: "{{EZarticle-closed-auto‎}}" (just what's inside the "'s) just below the "{{Subpages}}" at the top of your article. It produces this notice:

Attention niels epting.png
Attention niels epting.png
This article is currently being developed as part of an Eduzendium student project. If you are not involved with this project, please refrain from collaboratively developing it until this notice is removed.
Articles that lack this notice, including many Eduzendium ones, welcome your collaboration!



If, on the other hand, you want to want to invite other Citizendium authors or editors to join you in working on your article, add this text: "{{EZarticle-open-auto‎}}" (just what's inside the "'s) just below the "{{Subpages}}" at the top of your article page. It produces this notice:

Nuvola apps kbounce green.png
Nuvola apps kbounce green.png
This article is currently being developed as part of an Eduzendium student project. One of the goals of the course is to provide students with insider experience in collaborative educational projects, and so you are warmly invited to join in here, or to leave comments on the discussion page. However, please refrain from removing this notice.
Besides, many other Eduzendium articles welcome your collaboration!


We encourage collaborative editing.

List of possible topics

For a start, have a look at List of music psychology topics. More information will follow.