Dear MCN,

You might have seen earlier calls for participation in our collaborative
writing project, or our surveys asking for perspectives from project
stakeholders or volunteers on crowdsourcing / citizen science / online
volunteering projects in museums, libraries and archives - here's the
result!

The first version of The Collective Wisdom Handbook: Perspectives on
Crowdsourcing in Cultural Heritage
<https://britishlibrary.pubpub.org/?utm_source=blog&utm_medium=blog&utm_campaign=community_review>
is
now available to read online. And not just to read – we're also asking for
comment from people with expertise and experience in the topics we cover,
from crowdsourcing to citizen science and history, to online volunteering
and digital engagement with museum, library and archive collections. Your
knowledge might be drawn from academic practice, from volunteering as a
crowdsourcing participant, or from helping run, develop, or analyse
outcomes of participatory projects.

We authors are excited to open up our work for review and comment from the
wider community from now to mid-August 2021. Community review is a vital
part of the overall process of documenting the 'state of the art' in this
field, particularly as our book was written in two intensive week-long
'sprints' <https://collectivewisdomproject.org.uk/activities/>. Our writing
team <https://collectivewisdomproject.org.uk/participants-and-credits/> already
represents perspectives from a range of disciplines. However, we believe
that the book would benefit from additional connections to related fields,
practitioners and scholarship. We particularly welcome comments that
complicate or add nuance to our text. We encourage you to suggest example
projects, case studies, blog posts and publications we might have missed.

There are a few ways that readers can leave a trace on documents on the
pubpub <https://britishlibrary.pubpub.org/> platform – you can highlight
text, comment on specific lines, or comment on a document as a whole.
You'll need to create a free pubpub account to do this – full details on
how to set up an account and comment are available
<https://v3.pubpub.org/pub/howto>.

So how do we imagine comments or highlights might help our readers improve
the book?

   - You can let us know what resonates – you can highlight text, or
   comment on specific lines of text with any language appropriate to you,
   from '+1' to 'yassssssss!'.
   - Did we get something wrong? You can offer a correction in a comment.
   - Would the book be better if we included additional references to other
   projects or publications? Please let us know!
   - We'd also love to hear about how you might use the text – you could
   comment on chapters that might be particularly useful for specific uses,
   and let us know how they could be even more useful for you.

Please bear in mind that your comments will be read by the authors as is,
and that some generalisations are necessary when covering such a broad
topic in just two weeks. To put it another way, please try to avoid being
the dreaded 'Reviewer 2
<https://amlbrown.com/2015/11/10/how-not-to-be-reviewer-2/>' and keep your
comments constructive.

How this process affects the book is as yet unknown. It might lead to minor
edits or more substantial updates – it depends on the response to this
community review process.

We will of course credit and thank any commenters who make a substantial
contribution. We're also thinking about peer review models for specific
chapters, perhaps something like a 'respondent' to a talk or panel
discussion. If you're interested in exploring that with us, please email
digitalresea...@bl.uk and include 'Collective Wisdom' in the subject line.

We are lucky to work in a field with a generous, thoughtful and passionate
community of practitioners, academics and volunteers in crowdsourcing and
digital participation around museum, library and archive collections. We
look forward to learning from your comments, questions and suggestions.

The *review period for this publication will close on August 9, 2021*.
After this, we’ll begin re-editing to incorporate feedback (and fix
oddities in referencing etc.) and produce our final version of the book. We
hope to find a 'traditional' publisher to help distribute and position the
book where it can best reach our readers.
Cheers,

Mia

--------------------------------------------
http://openobjects.org.uk/
http://twitter.com/mia_out
Check out my book! http://bit.ly/CrowdsourcingOurCulturalHeritage
P.S. I mostly use this address for list mail and don't check it daily
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