Hi Reem,
I’m happy to help you as much as possible.
At my institution, we are exploring how Wikipedia can work on different levels
such as:
1. Reading Wikipedia pages critically.
* Read the History of a page
* Turn on the Assessment options, so you can see the color and quality
of a page
* Read the Talk page
* Explore references.
2. Make simple citation edits using the Citation Hunt Tool.
3. Look at Dashboards and courses for examples.
4. Look at these assignments from Butler University librarians. Go to
http://libguides.butler.edu/facultystaff/wikipedia and click Assignments.
These projects all support the information literacy goals in the ACRL framework.
Are the librarians English speakers or Arabic speakers or both?
I can send you some attachments from the Wikipedia +
Libraries<https://www.webjunction.org/explore-topics/wikipedia-libraries.html>
project that you might find helpful. I can also collaborate on assignments
with you.
You can start very simple and slow and users will still learn a lot!
Please be in touch!
Best wishes,
Laura
--
Laura Jenemann
Communication, Media, & Film Librarian
Boston University
617-353-9240
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
From: Libraries <[email protected]> on behalf of Andromeda
Yelton <[email protected]>
Reply-To: Wikimedia & Libraries <[email protected]>
Date: Monday, September 17, 2018 at 9:28 AM
To: Wikimedia & Libraries <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [libraries] Meeting Librarians Soon. Help!
I am a librarian! I think the key thing is finding ways that *Wikipedia* can
advance the *librarians'* goals. I think when these initiatives fail it's often
because they're framed in terms of how librarians can advance Wikipedia's
goals. (And asking people who are overworked and underpaid to contribute free
labor to a project they're not already invested in is...not an obvious value
proposition.)
Now I have no idea what the going concerns are for Egyptian librarians, so I
can't advise you on specifics. But here are some things librarians are often
interested in that can be approached via Wikipedia:
* research and information literacy skills: finding and evaluating sources
* digital literacy and computer usage skills
* propaganda, misinformation, fake news (though I expect this plays very
differently in Egypt than where I am in the US)
* supporting the learning that is going on in professors' classrooms
* open access
They're often interested in digital preservation and research data management
too, but their approaches are SO different that Wikipedia is probably less
useful here.
What kind of interest are your librarians expressing? Why do THEY want to learn
more?
On Mon, Sep 17, 2018, 7:22 AM Reem Al-Kashif
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hello,
Hope this finds you well. I didn't plan on meeting librarians at a university
here in Cairo, Egypt, but they expressed interest in Wikipedia, so we are
meeting :). The problem is, I really don't know what activities to offer them.
I have zero experience in Wiki+libraries collaborations. It would be more than
great if anybody could help me out. What I need is:
1. Understanding the nature of librarians work (I know it is a big topic, but
some general remarks would do).
2. Having examples of activities they can be part of to contribute to Wiki (be
it Wikipedia or Wikimedia).
3. Understanding how rewarding those activities are (so that I explain to them)
4. Having examples of similar activities, if any, around the world.
Bonus point 5. Having a clear plan of action to give them (i.e. what do we do
after the meeting and so on)
Thank you so so much in advance for helping me navigate this uncharted
territory.
Best,
Reem
--
Kind regards,
Reem Al-Kashif
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