 A lot of students feel that they're learning in school is kind of useless because they put all of this effort and time into coming up with a great research paper and they turn it in and it just ends up in somebody's drawer. But with a Wikipedia assignment they put it onto the article on Wikipedia and thousands if not tens of thousands of people end up seeing their work. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia that anybody can edit. On Wikipedia everything is published live so as students are working to develop their articles. They're getting constant feedback sometimes from the Wikipedia editing community. Our students are learning how to edit Wikipedia as part of their coursework and they're assisted by Wikipedia ambassadors who are trained by our program. More than 500 classes have participated in the Wikipedia education worldwide so far. We are constantly having new classes added. Back in fall 2010 we had a student who was participating in a course at Georgetown University where he rewrote the article on the National Democratic Party of Egypt. This was before the revolution in Egypt about two months before it. When the revolution started happening and the protesters were taking the streets in Cairo people all around the world turned to Wikipedia to learn about the political party that President Mubarak was affiliated with and what they found there was the article that the student had written. I did, I wrote the article the whole thing and it's something that isn't an estasis. I mean it's information that's changing. I quoted news articles which again are very temporal and related to now and yeah I will go back in a few months to make sure that when the next president is elected if it's not what I say in the article that I change it to make sure.