 We are creating a wiki page which is a platform that allows us to use the internet and do research. The nice thing about wiki page is it can be accessed by anyone. It can be within our faculty or just anyone who has a general interest. So the idea was to create sort of templates or initial pages to which others can add rather than the wiki format. With the conservation course, these are group projects for students to work on one. And they have an enormous range of topics. The students very often need to be reminded that they have a voice, they have opinions and through the learnings we do, they can begin to reliably and securely report on issues that they have been researching in their own voice and at their own pace. And I think the wiki is a perfect medium for this. To be honest, it's very intimidating because this is my first project personally that will ever be published in the public. So it's very critical that we do it accurately and we credit all sources that we take from and that we also input our own ideas. In a vast university like UBC, a student can feel quite small. And I think very often many of them feel they have nothing new to say. Giving them this platform, creating content, synthesizing data, gives them that confidence as they go into their professional lives and allows them to see that they can make a useful contribution, that their own points of view is valid. It's honestly such a good platform because we are able to see where it goes. We're able to see how many people can view the pages and they can use the research for themselves. As an undergraduate student, not a lot of the stuff that you do ever seems to really get recognized because it's mainly just going to the prof so that they can view it. But having this on the website, we're able to kind of show that we're capable of writing something that is publishable and something that other people can learn from. And it's kind of an honor to be able to represent UBC on the platform.