Thanks SJ! On the subject I noticed on the meetup.com group that UMass Lowell is doing a WLL event on the 13th. Does anyone have a contact over there? I'll be at the Wikidata presentation at the same time but it would be nice to coordinate with them and add the event to the Wikipedia page for our New England Wikimedia group.
Gabe On Nov 5, 2012, at 4:09 PM, Samuel Klein <[email protected]> wrote: > FYI > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > From: Sarah Stierch <[email protected]> > Date: Mon, Nov 5, 2012 at 1:02 PM > Subject: [cultural-partners] [BLOG] Why Wikipedians should love Libraries > To: Wikimedia Chapters cultural partners coordination > <[email protected]> > Cc: "Wikimedia & GLAM collaboration [Public]" <[email protected]> > > > By Merrrilee Profitt from the OCLC - please share! > > https://blog.wikimedia.org/2012/11/05/why-wikipedians-should-love-librarians/ > > [image] > > Last year marked the start of Wikipedia Loves Libraries (WLL), and in 2012, > WLL activities are in full swing, with many events planned in the coming > month. WLL was originally conceived as a way of celebrating Open Access Week, > but we now have WLL events throughout the year. As a librarian who is > interested in seeing more coordination between libraries and other cultural > heritage organizations (i.e. GLAM), I’d like to offer some perspectives on > why libraries and Wikipedia are so well aligned with one another. > > The bottom line is that we share a common mission. We are dedicated to > providing free access to information and knowledge. Wikipedians want to > strengthen their articles by citing credible sources. If those sources are in > print, or hidden behind paywalls, it undermines the important tenant of free > access. > > Libraries collect those same credible sources and make them freely available > to patrons. Partnering with libraries helps keep sources free. Librarians > value “information literacy,” which means teaching the general public to > recognize, appreciate and rely on credible sources. Sound familiar? Teaching > basic Wikipedia editing skills can be a great, practical way to re-enforce > information literacy skills. > > Encouraging more librarians to become Wikipedians will also help address the > gender gap. Librarians are an almost mirror image of Wikipedians in terms of > gender – a March 2012 survey of members of the American Library Association > found that 80.7 percent of those in the profession are female (versus about > 10 percent of Wikipedians). > > So, if you haven’t already, reach out to your local librarian. Suggest a WLL > event, or find out if you can use library space to hold an editathon on a > topic of local interest. Ask for help from your library in promoting events, > not only to library patrons, but also to staff. Be patient, and recognize > that librarians may move at a slower pace than Wikipedians (and that they > have a range of other events and activities on top of their day-to-day > duties). Be complementary to see if you can find a way for Wikipedia > activities to harmonize with areas where the library is already investing. If > you make the effort, I think you’ll have a good shot at creating a beautiful > partnership, and creating some new Wikipedians in the process. > > -Merrilee Proffitt, Senior Program Officer, OCLC Research (User:Mlet) > > > > -- > Sarah Stierch > Museumist and open culture advocate > >>Visit sarahstierch.com<< > > _______________________________________________ > cultural-partners mailing list > [email protected] > https://intern.wikimedia.ch/lists/listinfo/cultural-partners > > > > -- > Samuel Klein @metasj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266 > > > > On Mon, Nov 5, 2012 at 1:02 PM, Sarah Stierch <[email protected]> wrote: > By Merrrilee Profitt from the OCLC - please share! > > https://blog.wikimedia.org/2012/11/05/why-wikipedians-should-love-librarians/ > > [image] > > Last year marked the start of Wikipedia Loves Libraries (WLL), and in 2012, > WLL activities are in full swing, with many events planned in the coming > month. WLL was originally conceived as a way of celebrating Open Access > Week, but we now have WLL events throughout the year. As a librarian who is > interested in seeing more coordination between libraries and other cultural > heritage organizations (i.e. GLAM), I’d like to offer some perspectives on > why libraries and Wikipedia are so well aligned with one another. > > The bottom line is that we share a common mission. We are dedicated to > providing free access to information and knowledge. Wikipedians want to > strengthen their articles by citing credible sources. If those sources are in > print, or hidden behind paywalls, it undermines the important tenant of free > access. > > Libraries collect those same credible sources and make them freely available > to patrons. Partnering with libraries helps keep sources free. Librarians > value “information literacy,” which means teaching the general public to > recognize, appreciate and rely on credible sources. Sound familiar? Teaching > basic Wikipedia editing skills can be a great, practical way to re-enforce > information literacy skills. > > Encouraging more librarians to become Wikipedians will also help address the > gender gap. Librarians are an almost mirror image of Wikipedians in terms of > gender – a March 2012 survey of members of the American Library > Association found that 80.7 percent of those in the profession are female > (versus about 10 percent of Wikipedians). > > So, if you haven’t already, reach out to your local librarian. Suggest a WLL > event, or find out if you can use library space to hold an editathon on a > topic of local interest. Ask for help from your library in promoting events, > not only to library patrons, but also to staff. Be patient, and recognize > that librarians may move at a slower pace than Wikipedians (and that they > have a range of other events and activities on top of their day-to-day > duties). Be complementary to see if you can find a way for Wikipedia > activities to harmonize with areas where the library is already investing. If > you make the effort, I think you’ll have a good shot at creating a beautiful > partnership, and creating some new Wikipedians in the process. > > -Merrilee Proffitt, Senior Program Officer, OCLC Research (User:Mlet) > > > > -- > Sarah Stierch > Museumist and open culture advocate > >>Visit sarahstierch.com<< > > _______________________________________________ > cultural-partners mailing list > [email protected] > https://intern.wikimedia.ch/lists/listinfo/cultural-partners > > > > -- > Samuel Klein @metasj w:user:sj +1 617 529 4266 > > _______________________________________________ > Wikimedia-boston mailing list > [email protected] > https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-boston
_______________________________________________ Wikimedia-boston mailing list [email protected] https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimedia-boston
