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[[File:Summer 2023 newsletter header.png|alt=Photo of yellow buttercups against green grass in the sunshine|center|frame|File:Henllys Buttercups.jpg by WelshDave CC BY-SA 4.0]]
== Welcome to the winter 2023 newsletter ==
I’m delighted to welcome you to the winter edition of our newsletter. This contains lots of news and information about Wikimedia UK’s activities and partnerships over the past few months, including our recent Community Meeting and Train the Trainer course for volunteers; the conclusion of our two and a half year Connected Heritage programme, funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund; and our ongoing climate-focused residency at the University of Exeter’s Global Systems Institute.


== Welcome to the spring/summer 2023 newsletter ==
As the year draws to a close, many of us will be reflecting on events in the wider world, and deeply concerned about the ongoing conflict in Gaza and Israel. In this blog post (link), I talk about the work of Wikimedia staff and volunteers to address the increasing threat of disinformation, in relation to the war and other crises.  
Welcome to Wikimedia UK’s summer newsletter. While the weather hasn’t been what you’d expect it to be at this time of year - at least here in the UK - there are plenty of good things going on in the charity. I hope you enjoy reading about some of these activities - from our involvement in Wiki Loves Earth, through to our advocacy around the Online Safety Bill. Last month, we launched a new publication, [[commons:File:Wikimedia_and_Democracy_-_Wikimedia_UK_report_2021_(full_report).pdf|Wikimedia and Democracy]], which highlights the impact of our work on information literacy and active citizenship. And if you didn’t catch it in our last newsletter, please do have a look at our [https://2022strategicreport.wikimedia.org.uk/?_gl=1*15lkvl3*_ga*MTc3NDAyMzI2Mi4xNjY2NjEzMjU3*_ga_HC8K1E60XT*MTY4MDI2MzQ5MS45MC4wLjE2ODAyNjM0OTEuMC4wLjA.*_ga_39J3EQWPXC*MTY4MDI2MzQ5MS41Ny4wLjE2ODAyNjM0OTEuMC4wLjA.&_ga=2.9895926.233472741.1680180989-1774023262.1666613257 Strategic Report for 2022/23]. It’s a great snapshot of the work we’ve been doing over the last year, with videos, case studies and statistics, and it’s beautifully illustrated with images from Wikimedia Commons.


I’m delighted to share that our Director of Programmes and Evaluation, Daria Cybulska, has recently secured two Fellowships, both of which connect to Wikimedia UK and our work in information literacy and citizen activism. Next summer, Daria will be exploring different approaches and tools for safe and effective online activism, through the highly regarded Churchill Fellowship. Meanwhile, during the 2023/24 academic year Daria will be a Storytelling Fellow at the University of the Arts, London, with a focus on information literacy.
The end of the year is also a time to reflect on the events, achievements and challenges of our own lives and work. I’m very proud of what the Wikimedia UK staff team, trustees, community leaders, partners, volunteer contributors and participants have delivered together during 2023, and the difference we have made to the online information environment.


Whilst our partnership activities tend to be a bit quieter over the summer, the Wikimedia movement never sleeps, and several of our team (including myself) will be giving presentations at the annual Wikimania conference. Whilst Covid brought about changes in our programme that we want to retain, particularly in terms of remote participation, I’m personally looking forward to reconnecting with Wikimedians from around the world at the first in-person Wikimania since 2019.
Thank you to everyone who supported our Giving Tuesday campaign. Our work to empower people to learn, share, and create knowledge relies on the generosity of donors like you. Thank you for helping to ensure that we can continue our programmes in 2024 and beyond.


Lucy Crompton-Reid
Lucy Crompton-Reid
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Chief Executive
Chief Executive


== Wikimania 2023 ==
== 2023 UK Community Meeting - videos and opportunities ==
[[File:Wikimania 2023 Singapore Banner logo.svg|alt=Wikimania 2023 Singapore Banner logo with illustration of flowers around it|thumb|Wikimania 2023 Singapore Banner logo]]
On Sunday 26th November we hosted a thoroughly enjoyable Community Meeting. It was a chance for our community to gather online, share the work that’s taken place over the last year, recognise that work through the UK Wikimedian of the Year awards, and find out more ways to get involved. The meeting was only two hours long, but managed to show a truly impressive portfolio of wiki work from our volunteers and partners. Thank you to everyone who contributed and came along!
We have a few staff members giving talks and presentations at Wikimania 2023. Dr Sara Thomas will be presenting a session on how to build a [[wmania:2023:Program/Submissions/Building_capacity:_designing_a_train_the_trainer_programme_for_your_affiliate_or_community_group_-_BLLNMH|Train the Trainer]] programme, drawing on Wikimedia UK’s experience of running regular Train the Trainer courses. This hands-on workshop is designed to give you a framework for building a Train the Trainer programme in your own affiliate or community group.


Lucy Crompton-Reid and Tatjana Baleta will be doing a [[wmania:2023:Program/Submissions/Sharing_insights_from_the_UK's_first_residency_for_Climate_-_Q9UM3G|Climate]] talk. This session will focus on the work of the Wikimedia Visiting Fellow at the University of Exeter’s Global Systems Institute, Tatjana Baleta, appointed by Wikimedia UK in October 2022. Tatjana and Lucy will share some of the key insights from this project, which represents Wikimedia UK's first Wikimedian in Residence for our strategic theme of Climate & Environment.
For anyone who missed it, you can find recordings of the talks, the opportunities fair, and awards over on this blog.


Daria Cybulska will talk about the grant-funded project with the Sheila McKechnie Foundation, '[[wmania:2023:Program/Submissions/Changemaker's_toolbox_-_brainstorming_introductory_resources_to_campaigning_and_advocacy_-_AFCAKW|Changemakers toolbox]]'. This workshop is to present, gather feedback on, and build engagement for a suite of introductory materials about changemaking, advocacy, and campaigning. This addresses a skills development content gap in the 2030 implementation strategy. These materials, sitting within a portal space on Meta, could then be used by Wikimedia communities globally to facilitate their thinking on how Wikipedia can be used for change, and to build their introductory skills in advocacy. Advocacy here is thought about broadly, not just in terms of copyright lobbying, but in all areas of change making that Wikimedia has potential for.
== The 2023 Wikimedian of the Year Awards ==


There’s plenty of other sessions at Wikimania, some of which are only available to those attending in person such as the Wikimania Hackathon running from the 15th-19th August. The Hackathon will feature a Newcomer Track with introductory sessions and workshops, and an Unconference Track with breakout rooms for sessions identified during the event. A main hacking space will be available throughout the event for collaborative work.
==== Partnership of the Year ====
This prize was won by the Royal College of Nursing’s History of Nursing Forum (HONF) “Nurses in Red”. The forum established an editing group to improve and create content relating to the history of nursing on Wikipedia. So far they have improved more than 200 articles which have been viewed nearly 4.5 million times. The group’s focus is explicitly diversity focused too: nurses have often been from under-represented groups and making their lives and careers more visible on Wikipedia is so important.


== Wiki Loves Earth ==
Our Honourable Mention was awarded to the Khalili Collections and Glaire Anderson of the University of Edinburgh. Glaire has supported two classroom projects in which her History of Art students evaluated articles about Islamic Art and Science on Wikipedia, and then improved them. Many of the pages are now illustrated with beautiful 10th/11th century Caliphate images from the Khalilli Collections, which were released on Wikimedia Commons. Prior to this project, the Khalili images were not viewed by as many people, but are now reaching a wider audience on pages with high engagement.
[[File:Three Cliffs Bay, Gower.jpg|alt=Photo of Three Cliffs Bay, Gower at sunrise|thumb|Three Cliffs Bay, Gower]]
Northern Ireland and Wales have been taking part in the 2023 Wiki Loves Earth competition. Wiki Loves Earth is an annual competition for photographers to enter pictures of the natural world in participating countries. By photographing Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs), National Parks, Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty etc. we can raise awareness for the need to protect the flora and fauna of these areas. Future snapshots could be used to show the differences in the biosphere and the impact of climate change. If Wikipedia could better illustrate this change, we could help negate the effect.


There’s still time to enter the competition before the deadline of the 31st July if you have not yet done so. You can submit your photographs for Wales [[commons:Commons:Wiki_Loves_Earth_2023_in_Wales|here]], and for Northern Ireland [[commons:Commons:Wiki_Loves_Earth_2023_in_Northern_Ireland|here]].
==== Up and Coming Wikimedian ====
This prize was won by Heidi Berg, a prolific editor who has updated or created over 300 articles, vastly improving coverage of the Norwegian women’s football team. She also undertook Train the Trainer courses and helped other newbie editors on a regular basis. At monthly Women in Red editathons, she helps others and even lent her own laptop to one forgetful participant!


== Wiki Loves Monuments ==
Our Honourable Mention was awarded to Sophie Whitfield, one of Wikimedia UK’s trainers who has shown incredible dedication over the last year in attending, designing, and delivering open knowledge workshops and projects. Sophie has supported projects at Durham University and Newcastle University, helping Wikimedia UK’s collaborations with higher education.
Hot on the heels of Wiki Loves Earth, we turn our attention to Wiki Loves Monuments. The photography competition themed around historic sites will return on 1st September and run throughout the month. Through the competition we aim to improve our visual record of heritage sites in the UK. You can take part by submitting your photographs to the competition. Full details, along with what sites are eligible, are on the [https://www.wikilovesmonuments.org.uk/ competition website].


Whether you’re shaping a snapshot of a local historic building or making a trip especially to take the perfect photo in the right light, photographers of all skill levels are welcome to take part. Photographs don’t have to be taken in September, so you can get a head start and organise your photos now and check out what places are [https://www.wikilovesmonuments.org.uk/eligible-buildings eligible subjects].
==== UK Wikimedian of the Year ====
This prize was won by Nick Sheppard, a Wikimedia volunteer and Open Research Advisor at the University of Leeds. Nick has advocated for Wikimedia projects within Leeds and in the university sector like few people ever have, and he’s really taken on the values of the Wikimedia movement, not just in his professional life. Nick has also been pushing for the UK Reproducibility Network to include guidance on Wikimedia in its advice to researchers. The Wikimedia Champions project they ran at Leeds has been an unusually successful student project, getting PhD students to contribute to Wikimedia in a variety of ways.


If you would like to organise a photo walk in your area, please contact richard.nevell@wikimedia.org.uk for support.
Our Honourable Mention was awarded to Ian Pigott. Ian has been the engine that keeps Women in Red going. He has organised an astonishing 270 editathons over the last eight years. His efforts have inspired others and he has been tireless in helping the Women in Red project, addressing Wikipedia’s gender gap.


== UK Online Safety Bill ==
== Wiki Loves Earth winners in Wales and Northern Ireland ==
The UK’s Online Safety Bill (OSB) addresses important safety issues to protect children and adults online. However, in its current state, the Bill unduly threatens the survival and welfare of projects that prioritise the public interest over profits. The Bill neglects to protect free knowledge, privacy, freedom of speech, and the strength of civic society in the UK.
In an effort to document the beauty of our natural world on the Wikimedia projects, photographers took part in the international Wiki Loves Earth competition. For the second year running, Wales had the second highest number of photos submitted to the Wiki Loves Earth competition, with over 5000 images. Northern Ireland took part in the competition for the fourth year running, submitting an impressive 363 photos. Ultimately, the aim of adding photographs to Wikimedia Commons is so they are used and seen. Be it on Wikipedia articles or in another medium entirely, openly licensing images helps the Internet be more informative and useful for all of us. Images from WLE in Wales are among the most frequently added to Wikipedia articles, with 51% of this year’s photos added to relevant pages. All of the photographs from this year’s competition can be found here.


In an attempt to weed out the worst parts of the internet, the OSB jeopardises the best parts of the internet. So, we are calling on the UK Government and Parliament to exempt public interest projects from the OSB.
== Connected Heritage ==
The Connected Heritage project has come to an end, with so many brilliant outcomes including residencies at cultural institutions and a whole toolkit to learn from. From 2021 to 2023 we worked with partner organisations across the four nations to deliver digital skills training for volunteers, staff and local communities. The project aimed to raise digital skills and confidence across the heritage sector through Wiki training.
 
One of the most transformative ways in which we worked with partner organisations was through mini Wikimedian residencies. From 2022 to 2023 we worked with both the Royal Albert Memorial Museum (RAMM), and The Mixed Museum, enriching collections data on Wiki platforms. In this work we highlighted the ways in which a step-by-step approach to this kind of change can open up knowledge to the wider community, and bring audiences back to the source institution.
 
In March 2023, Chamion Caballero, director of The Mixed Museum, Jane Secker and Victoria Araj participated in a roundtable discussion moderated by the Connected Heritage team, as part of the Heritage Dot 2.0 conference hosted by the University of Lincoln. You can view the video here.
 
The discussion touched on how engagement with Wiki-based projects enabled cultural heritage organisations to improve the accessibility of their collections, while simultaneously empowering volunteers and members through embedded digital upskilling. The Mixed Museum’s Wikipedia edits were discussed as an example of ways that open knowledge can place overlooked cultural histories into the dominant narrative.


As it is currently written, the Online Safety Bill could require the Wikimedia Foundation to collect data about Wikipedia users’ identities, track their actions, intervene in their editing processes, and interfere with their ability to set and enforce rules for what constitutes well-sourced neutral content about a given subject. Such requirements are counter to Wikipedia’s editorial guidelines and policies, as well as its privacy policy. In short, the requirements would jeopardise volunteers’ ability to contribute to the website and offer linguistically relevant cultural and educational content — including information that reflects and serves the lives and experiences of minorities and historically marginalised groups.
To see more of the project’s achievements, you can see Lucy Hinnie’s blog.


We have written a blog about the risks the bill poses to public interest projects, which you can read [https://medium.com/freely-sharing-the-sum-of-all-knowledge/protect-the-future-of-wikipedia-in-the-uk-9c1bbc5d039a here]. You can also see a list of [https://wikimedia.org.uk/2023/06/frequently-asked-questions/ FAQs], read the open letter and, if you have not already, sign it [https://wikimedia.org.uk/2023/06/online-safety-bill-open-letter/ here].
== Celtic Knot Wikimedia Language Conference 2024 ==
We are very happy to announce that the conference dedicated to minoritized languages on the Wikimedia projects will be back for its 7th edition, to be held in Waterford City, Ireland, in September 2024. The exact date will be announced as soon as possible.


== Wikimedia UK’s 2023 AGM: election results ==
Getting back to its roots in the Celtic languages and nations, the event gathers people from communities and languages that are underrepresented on the Wikimedia projects. It is a place where people working on growing and maintaining their communities can meet, learn from each other, and support each other on topics like community growth, technical tools, or collaboration with partners.
Many thanks to those of you who attended Wikimedia UK's AGM. For those who weren't there, we’re pleased to report that Sammy Tarling was elected to the Board of Trustees. Sammy is a long standing Wikimedian, having served as a functionary on the English Wikipedia and globally across the Wikimedia projects as a Steward until late 2022. Sammy has worked as a software engineer on the Community Tech team at the Wikimedia Foundation since early last year, and has experience as a company director.


Sammy replaces Kelly Foster as an elected trustee. Our thanks to Kelly were recorded at the AGM and we would like to reiterate them here. Kelly has served a three year term as a trustee, bringing a wealth of knowledge and experience of the global Wikimedia movement. Whilst she is stepping down from the board, she has agreed to remain on the Community Development Committee as an independent member. We are very grateful to continue to benefit from Kelly’s insights and networks in this capacity.
Celtic Knot 2024, will be an in-person event, held in Waterford, Ireland's oldest city which has an abundance of cultural heritage and history. We are exploring options to make conference resources (talks, panels, etc.) available to those who are unable to attend in person.


All the ordinary board resolutions were passed, and the minutes from the 2022 meeting were approved.
We are currently gathering input from the community to build a conference tailored to your needs: whether you attended a previous edition of the Celtic Knot or not, if you are involved in underrepresented languages on the Wikimedia Projects, please take a few minutes to fill in the community survey (available in English, Irish and Welsh), and make sure to share the information with your local group. The survey is open until January 21st.


This is just a reminder that if you want to be able to vote at future AGMs, please sign up for membership [[Membership|here]]. At the recent meeting, members voted to keep the membership fee at just £5 a year for individuals, although we always welcome additional donations!
As we are starting to build the concept and the program, we will regularly improve the existing event pages on Meta and post updates on the talk page of the event.


== Wikimedia and Democracy ==
The core organising team is composed of Amy O’Riordan (WCI), Sophie Fitzpatrick (WCI), Daria Cybulska (WMUK), Richard Nevell (WMUK), supported by Léa Lacroix (community engagement consultant).
[[File:Wikimedia and Democracy - Wikimedia UK report 2021 (summary brochure).pdf|thumb|Wikimedia and Democracy - Wikimedia UK report]]
Wikimedia UK has long believed that our workshops and training sessions make a difference in empowering people – by building their information literacy skills, providing an opportunity to collaborate, and capturing their heritage. In 2021, together with Agnes Bruszik, a research colleague, our Director of Programmes and Evaluation Daria Cybulska undertook a critical investigation into how engaging with Wikimedia projects contributes to the strengthening of civil society and democratic processes in the UK.


The main inquiry was to understand how improving information literacy skills contributes to Wikimedia UK’s vision of a more tolerant, informed and democratic society. Does our work increase participants’ information literacy, and does this in turn lead to a more engaged civil society?
== Climate residency at the Global Systems Institute ==
With over 324 million annual page views across more than 25,000 climate change-related articles, Wikipedia is one of the largest information sources on climate change in the world. Our resident at the University of Exeter’s Global Systems Institute (GSI), Tatjana Baleta, has spent significant time facilitating researchers and students to improve climate change content on Wikipedia.


Ultimately, we found that working on Wikimedia UK projects can facilitate a spirit of working towards a common good, aka free knowledge for all. It also enables cooperation with others and activism, which in the long run encourages an empowered civil society. This we believe can go a long way towards realising Wikimedia UK’s vision of a more informed, democratic and equitable society.
To date, the project has trained more than 90 editors in 10 editathons, and articles from Effects of climate change on human health to Tipping Points in the climate system have also undergone review by subject matter experts.


Daria delivered an online workshop on the findings of the report, with a curated Q&A facilitated by our trustee - and founder/director of Wise Kids, Sangeet Bhullar. You can read the report [[commons:File:Wikimedia_and_Democracy_-_Wikimedia_UK_report_2021_(full_report).pdf|here]], and watch a recording of the workshop [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b0lsrZoPj6M&ab_channel=WikimediaUK here].
Tatjana has also been engaging lecturers about using Wikimedia platforms as a teaching tool. One MSc Sustainable Solutions student, two undergraduate Biosciences students and one PhD student in Environmental Intelligence are undertaking projects involving Wikipedia.


== Connected Heritage ==
After a successful first year, the project has secured funding to continue for a second. Find out more about the project here.
In May the Connected Heritage team said farewell to Leah Emary as she took up a full-time post with the University of Sunderland. Since the project started in August 2021 Leah and Lucy Hinnie have been instrumental in advancing WMUK’s work with the cultural heritage sector.
 
== Coda article on the impact of OSB on Welsh Wikipedia ==
The Online Safety Bill passed into law in October, marking the end of our efforts to ensure public interest projects are not damaged by the legislation, and the start of a long process of understanding what compliance will mean in practice for Wikipedia and the other Wikimedia projects. Robin Owain, our Programme Manager for Wales, and Jason Evans, the Open Data Manager for the National Library of Wales, were interviewed by Coda about how the bill could affect their volunteer Wiki work in Wales.
 
== Palestinian history and culture ==
We spoke to Lucy Moore, winner of the 2022 UK Wikimedian of Year Award, about the editing she’s been doing on the cultural heritage of Palestine. Lucy kept seeing calls from Palestinians on social media for their culture to be shared online as a way for it to be preserved. As a museum professional, Lucy thought the best approach would be to start with Palestinian museums. She started an article for the Palestine Museum of Natural History, which was nominated for the Did You Know section of Wikipedia and received 7889 views on the 1st December. From what Lucy could find online, The Al Qarara Museum has been destroyed. She started an article for it, and in researching for that page she found UNESCO’s listing for Palestine’s intangible heritage. From there Lucy’s created a number of pages on Palestinian culture, but is aware that there are people based abroad who are experts in the field and can advise on Arab names/places. For this reason, Lucy joined an editathon in early December with a group of Wikimedians based in Jordan. The event itself was not only trained editors, but provided important historical and political context to ensure that the edits attendees might contribute took this context into account. It also brought editors together from a range of countries who worked across Wikipedias in different languages. Lucy commented that “digital content can be so fragile, so aggregating sources for others to use on Wikipedia almost feels like a form of digital salvage. For the Al Qarara Cultural Museum, to my knowledge it's not there anymore, with collections largely destroyed, so in some ways it feels like you're writing an epitaph.”
 
The organisers of the Palestine editathon have created a landing page for those who missed the launch but still want to participate.
 
== Khalili Collections residency ==
Openly sharing content to the Wikimedia projects is our bread and butter, but it's important to involve native language speakers where possible. With the help of the Islamic Civilization User Group, our resident at the Khalili Collections, Martin Poulter, discovered that an Arabic manuscript had been uploaded to Wikimedia Commons backwards. The manuscript detailed how to treat a tarantula bite with a pomegranate, but the Arabic was impossible to read. The Commons file was quickly reversed and the Wellcome Collection – from where the image was sourced – has updated its own database with the fix.
 
Volunteers are adding data and links from ArtUK to Wikidata. This query brings up Khalili Collections objects whose ArtUK link has been added to Wikidata. Martin wrote a short briefing for ArtUK on how they can use Wikidata to populate their tags database, and how they can use a bulk data dump to add a lot of their links to Wikidata.


A partnership with the Royal Albert Memorial Museum is a key part of the Connected Heritage project, and Lucy Hinnie is acting as their Wikimedian in Residence. Lucy has led online training workshops for volunteers over the spring and summer, with an online wikithon on the theme of Exeter’s built heritage. We intend to follow this up with an [https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/devon-in-red-wikithon-ramm-connected-heritage-tickets-679361377167?aff=oddtdtcreator in-person wikithon] in September, writing about Devon’s history.
In another example of extended reach, a blog post written by Martin a few years ago has seen a resurgence of interest thanks to the Digital Scriptorium. The Digital Scriptorium is a consortium of researchers from institutions including the University of Oxford and University of Pennsylvania, and they recommended the blog as a starting point for their own work describing pre-modern manuscripts on Wikidata. Further, Toby Burrows of the Bodleian Library wrote an academic paper citing the blog post and arguing that Wikidata could be used to create links between many different catalogues of manuscripts. Wikidata has a new Wikiproject to organise data on manuscripts. As part of this, Martin created a dashboard which shows the number of manuscripts from each collection that Wikidata knows about, with indicators of the data completeness for each collection. The Khalili Collection of Islamic Art presently has 132 manuscripts in this database, putting it ahead of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.


Over the summer we also ran a wikithon with the Washington Partnership in Tyne and Wear as part of events to mark the 60th anniversary of the new town. We also have an event planned with the Faversham Society in mid August.
== Queer Britain ==
This autumn, Queer Britain collaborated with Wikimedia UK to host a Wikimedian in Residence project. From August to November, Evie Moore worked on improving content on Wikipedia and related websites, with a focus on topics relevant to Queer Britain.


== New College Lanarkshire: become a Wikimedian course ==
One of Evie’s primary tasks during the residency was enhancing the 'LGBT rights in the UK' Wikipedia page, expanding sections on Advocacy Organisations, LGBT representation in politics, Pride Parades, and Rights for Asylum. The comprehensive 1500+ words added aim to provide a well-rounded view of the current landscape of LGBTQ+ rights in the UK. The page is read on average 12,000 times a month so is an important source of information.
This year marks the 10th Anniversary of the merger of New College Lanarkshire and as part of this the college offered a large number of free evening courses. One of these courses was Become a Wikimedian, which was an 11 week course that was conducted online. Throughout this course 10 students learned how to make positive contributions to multiple Wiki platforms, such as Wikipedia and Wikimedia Commons.


For many years Wikipedia has been viewed in a negative light by educators, however, this course has highlighted what a positive tool Wikipedia can be for learners.  Knowing how to use the platform properly to bolster research is key to its success.  The students quickly understand how Wikipedia can be used as a springboard to delve deep into research on a specific topic.
You can read Evie’s full blog on the residency here.


== Code the City ==
== ‘Doing History in Public’ with Cambridge University Library ==
Aberdeen-based civic hacking initiative Code The City is back with a weekend dedicated to the past, the present and future of Union Street and the City Centre area of Aberdeen.
In November, Doing History in Public hosted their second editathon in collaboration with Wikimedia UK, Cambridge University Library and Cambridge Department of Digital Humanities. After the successful May editathon, they were excited to build on their skills and introduce new students and staff to Wikipedia editing.


At this in-person event they'll be working with the team from Our Union Street; cultural organisations and heritage groups; planners and designers; citizens; and our multi-skilled volunteers, to work on a number of identified challenges over the weekend, which includes a Wikipedia / Wikimedia Commons editathon to coincide with Wiki Loves Monuments. More information on their [https://codethecity.org/what-we-do/hack-weekends/ctc30/ website].
The theme was ‘Out of the Shadows’, bringing underrepresented historical knowledge into the light of Wikipedia. This month’s event had a particularly French and feminist flavour, but also spanned to seventeenth century travel in Peru and Romanian films. For more info and links to the pages created/added to, have a read of Zara Kesterton’s blog.


== University of Edinburgh residency ==
== Train the Trainer ==
[[File:Torture types illustrated on map of accused witches in Scotland.jpg|alt=Torture types illustrated on map of accused witches in Scotland|thumb|Torture types illustrated on map of accused witches in Scotland]]
Train the Trainer is a course for volunteers who are keen to deliver Wikipedia editing events. Our recent London weekend with our newest cohort of trainee trainers was a great closing to 2023’s iteration of Train the Trainer. This year we used WikiLearn for the first time as part of the training programme, with a four week course in the run up to the weekend, covering subjects such as off-wiki tools, event management and supporting new editors. On the Saturday we bought a hybrid cohort together to cement that learning, and we'll be taking the next steps with the cohort in the new year. On Sunday we held a session for both the new trainers and our existing trainers on how to lead hybrid sessions, led by our training partner Bhav Patel.


=== Wikidata Map of Accused Witches project - new student intern ===
We had the following feedback from some of our trainers:
Our previous intern, Claire Panella, worked from February to May and has [https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/witchcraft_visualisation/finding-impossible-witches-part-one/ blogged] about her experience and created a markdown document for anyone wishing to quality assure the data in Wikidata when comparing csvs from it with csvs from the 'golden copy' of information in the Survey of Scottish Witchcraft database. Claire also created a sample 'change log' to keep track of any changes made to Wikidata and/or the Survey database so we can better track of amendments in the longer term. A new [[d:Wikidata:WikiProject_Scotland's_Accused_Witches|Wikidata project page]] has also been set up.


=== Wikimedia in the Curriculum paper ===
“At first, I supported other trainers until I was eventually confident enough to lead my own sessions on how to contribute to Wikipedia. They were for professional astronomers and science educators in South Africa - and I was helped online by a couple of other trainers - part of a great community of trained volunteers that Wikimedia UK has built up. It's given me a new way to enjoy sharing knowledge with people and communities in the UK and around the world. And they, in turn, can then use their new skills to share knowledge with others.” – Nick Moyes, Train the Trainer participant
Ewan McAndrew contributed case studies of Wikimedia in the Curriculum to a paper co-authored by Lorna Campbell and Dr. Melissa Highton on Supporting open education practice: What works for the EDUTEC Journal on Open Educational Practices in Higher Education at the invitation of Daniel Villar-Rubia at the University of Cadiz. This has now been completed and submitted.


== Inclusive Digital Arts and Humanities Research Skills ==
"The best part of volunteering with WMUK is definitely the community. In 2022, I founded the Wikimedia volunteering project at Durham University with the goal of promoting high quality open knowledge about North East England. We succeeded with that goal but what I didn’t expect was the strong sense of community that emerged as students engaged with local history. They really came together to make significant contributions to open knowledge, creating connections with each other and the local community!" – Sophie Whitfield, Train the Trainer participant
Wikimedia UK is collaborating with the London College of Communication on a one-year project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. The Inclusive Digital Arts and Humanities Research Skills (DAReS) CoLab aims to pilot a new digital skills curriculum for researchers, giving them the knowledge to carry out research and share results digitally. We are supporting the project and bringing a Wikimedia perspective to proceedings. As the project develops, Wikidata is taking a stronger role as a source of information and potentially a place that researchers can share data.


In early summer we took part in inclusion workshops to establish common ground between the project collaborators, create a behavioural policy, and share insights into inclusion and barriers. The next major landmark will be data handling workshops in October and November. We expect Wikidata to feature here, and ultimately we may end up sharing learning resources on one of the Wikimedia sites such as Wikiversity of WikiBooks.
“I've been giving Wikipedia trainings in Finland for over a decade now. Last year I joined Wikimedia UK's new team for Wikipedia trainers. I still deliver training in Finland, and I’ve also helped editors from across the world get their start on Wikipedia, such as a university class who were creating and editing articles for local female artists. We’ve worked on inserting citations, and ensuring that the article was easy to read for foreign language speakers who could potentially translate the article for a broader audience.” – Johanna Janhonen, Train the Trainer participant


== Climate Change residency ==
== VocalEyes ==
[[File:Aerial photo of center pivot irrigations systems (9364).jpg|alt=Aerial photo of center pivot irrigations systems|thumb|Aerial photo of center pivot irrigations systems (9364)]]
We’ve been working with VocalEyes since 2022. They play a vital role in making arts and heritage accessible for blind and visually impaired, D/deaf, hard of hearing, and neurodivergent visitors. They do this in a range of ways, including training and collaborating directly with arts and heritage organisations. They also conduct research on how various sectors are making their venues accessible.
Highlights in Tatjana’s work include co-leading an editathon in New York with the Earth Alliance. The New York City Editathon was held on Saturday the 15th June and was a successful event. It was organised as a collaborative effort between Depths of Wikipedia, WikimediaNYC, Earth Alliance, Su-Laine Yeo Brodsky and Tatjana Baleta. The themes were how we move, how we live, how we eat and what inspires us. 27 editors joined (including some totally new to Wikipedia editing), and they worked off a task list put together by Tatjana and Su-Laine that focused mostly on content relating to individual action (e.g. food waste, air travel). There were a number of useful edits, likely due to the detailed instructions provided in the task list.


Tatjana has been working with [https://climatevisuals.org/ Climate Visuals], an image library by Climate Outreach to help tell compelling stories about the impacts of climate change. Tatjana has helped them share hundreds of images from their collection which you can now find on [[commons:Category:Climate_Visuals_upload|Wikimedia Commons]]. WikiProject Climate Change have been very positive about the detailed descriptions that accompany the images, making them easier to use.
In November, our Programme Manager, Richard Nevell, spoke at their virtual Digital Volunteering Forum. There were also speakers from the Smithsonian Transcription Centre (USA), York Archaeology, Wild Museum, DLNET (Digital Learning Network for the cultural heritage sector), and The British Library. Together we explored impact evaluation, student volunteering and the seamless integration of digital projects into existing volunteer programs.


Hot on the heels of the Climate Visuals upload, Tatjana has been working with Our World in Data to share a collection of suitably licensed charts and maps on Wikimedia Commons. Jason Evans' support with Pattypan has been especially helpful. You can see the images [[commons:Category:OWID_climate_graphics_upload|here]]. All images from the residency are [[commons:Category:Files_uploaded_from_Global_Systems_Institute_Wikimedian_in_Residence_project_activities|here]], which is part of the 'Supported by Wikimedia UK' category tree.
== Sankofa London Schools project ==
We have been supporting the Sankofa London Schools project since early 2022. Nadege Forde-Vidal is a historian and archeologist. Nadege launched the project and got in touch with us to help the year 9 cohort of students share their work with the unlimited global audience of Wikimedia projects. It’s essentially a local history project with a London focus to explore the lives of men, women and children who escaped enslavement over 300 years ago. The adverts listing rewards for the return of these freedom seekers – available in a database created by the University of Glasgow – allow students to piece together life stories with the help of Nadege and a team of historians, curators and archivists. The Wikimedia projects allow the students to share their work with a global audience, learn to edit, and produce text appropriate for a public platform. The project was featured in a stall at Hounslow council’s celebration for Black History Month in October.


== Right to a healthy environment ==
While A-level history students currently volunteer their time to assist the year 9s’ work, the project is expanding in the new year with classes exclusively for A-level students.
This is the 3rd year for Wales to participate in this activity arranged by Wikimedia Foundation and the United Nations on Meta. A list of articles on the ‘Right to a healthy environment’ was published in March, and the Welsh language Wikipedia became the first to complete all suggested articles (around 200). See [[m:WikiForHumanRights/Topic_List|Meta]] for further information: please note that Welsh language (cy for Cymraeg) is the 3rd column.


== Join us ==
== Join us ==
We’re very grateful to and proud of the network we’ve built around our chapter. You can support the governance of the charity by becoming a [[Membership|member]], or support our projects through a [[Donate|donation]], or [[volunteer]] on some of the projects above.
We launched two new social media accounts in October, Tiktok and Mastodon, but you can still find us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. We’re very grateful to and proud of the network we’ve built around our chapter. You can support the governance of the charity by becoming a [[Membership|member]], which will allow you to vote on our board elections at the 2024 AGM on the 21st September. You can also support our projects through a [[Donate|donation]], or volunteer on some of the projects above. Our blog has more details on some of the activities mentioned in the newsletter.
 
We’re on social media if you’d like to connect with us there, we always appreciate new followers and sharers of our news; Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. You can also follow our blog, which has more details on some of the activities mentioned in the newsletter.


<nowiki>[[ Category:Friends' Newsletter ]]</nowiki>
<nowiki>[[ Category:Friends' Newsletter ]]</nowiki>

Revision as of 16:55, 15 December 2023

Welcome to the winter 2023 newsletter

I’m delighted to welcome you to the winter edition of our newsletter. This contains lots of news and information about Wikimedia UK’s activities and partnerships over the past few months, including our recent Community Meeting and Train the Trainer course for volunteers; the conclusion of our two and a half year Connected Heritage programme, funded by the National Lottery Heritage Fund; and our ongoing climate-focused residency at the University of Exeter’s Global Systems Institute.

As the year draws to a close, many of us will be reflecting on events in the wider world, and deeply concerned about the ongoing conflict in Gaza and Israel. In this blog post (link), I talk about the work of Wikimedia staff and volunteers to address the increasing threat of disinformation, in relation to the war and other crises.  

The end of the year is also a time to reflect on the events, achievements and challenges of our own lives and work. I’m very proud of what the Wikimedia UK staff team, trustees, community leaders, partners, volunteer contributors and participants have delivered together during 2023, and the difference we have made to the online information environment.

Thank you to everyone who supported our Giving Tuesday campaign. Our work to empower people to learn, share, and create knowledge relies on the generosity of donors like you. Thank you for helping to ensure that we can continue our programmes in 2024 and beyond.

Lucy Crompton-Reid

Chief Executive

2023 UK Community Meeting - videos and opportunities

On Sunday 26th November we hosted a thoroughly enjoyable Community Meeting. It was a chance for our community to gather online, share the work that’s taken place over the last year, recognise that work through the UK Wikimedian of the Year awards, and find out more ways to get involved. The meeting was only two hours long, but managed to show a truly impressive portfolio of wiki work from our volunteers and partners. Thank you to everyone who contributed and came along!

For anyone who missed it, you can find recordings of the talks, the opportunities fair, and awards over on this blog.

The 2023 Wikimedian of the Year Awards

Partnership of the Year

This prize was won by the Royal College of Nursing’s History of Nursing Forum (HONF) “Nurses in Red”. The forum established an editing group to improve and create content relating to the history of nursing on Wikipedia. So far they have improved more than 200 articles which have been viewed nearly 4.5 million times. The group’s focus is explicitly diversity focused too: nurses have often been from under-represented groups and making their lives and careers more visible on Wikipedia is so important.

Our Honourable Mention was awarded to the Khalili Collections and Glaire Anderson of the University of Edinburgh. Glaire has supported two classroom projects in which her History of Art students evaluated articles about Islamic Art and Science on Wikipedia, and then improved them. Many of the pages are now illustrated with beautiful 10th/11th century Caliphate images from the Khalilli Collections, which were released on Wikimedia Commons. Prior to this project, the Khalili images were not viewed by as many people, but are now reaching a wider audience on pages with high engagement.

Up and Coming Wikimedian

This prize was won by Heidi Berg, a prolific editor who has updated or created over 300 articles, vastly improving coverage of the Norwegian women’s football team. She also undertook Train the Trainer courses and helped other newbie editors on a regular basis. At monthly Women in Red editathons, she helps others and even lent her own laptop to one forgetful participant!

Our Honourable Mention was awarded to Sophie Whitfield, one of Wikimedia UK’s trainers who has shown incredible dedication over the last year in attending, designing, and delivering open knowledge workshops and projects. Sophie has supported projects at Durham University and Newcastle University, helping Wikimedia UK’s collaborations with higher education.

UK Wikimedian of the Year

This prize was won by Nick Sheppard, a Wikimedia volunteer and Open Research Advisor at the University of Leeds. Nick has advocated for Wikimedia projects within Leeds and in the university sector like few people ever have, and he’s really taken on the values of the Wikimedia movement, not just in his professional life. Nick has also been pushing for the UK Reproducibility Network to include guidance on Wikimedia in its advice to researchers. The Wikimedia Champions project they ran at Leeds has been an unusually successful student project, getting PhD students to contribute to Wikimedia in a variety of ways.

Our Honourable Mention was awarded to Ian Pigott. Ian has been the engine that keeps Women in Red going. He has organised an astonishing 270 editathons over the last eight years. His efforts have inspired others and he has been tireless in helping the Women in Red project, addressing Wikipedia’s gender gap.

Wiki Loves Earth winners in Wales and Northern Ireland

In an effort to document the beauty of our natural world on the Wikimedia projects, photographers took part in the international Wiki Loves Earth competition. For the second year running, Wales had the second highest number of photos submitted to the Wiki Loves Earth competition, with over 5000 images. Northern Ireland took part in the competition for the fourth year running, submitting an impressive 363 photos. Ultimately, the aim of adding photographs to Wikimedia Commons is so they are used and seen. Be it on Wikipedia articles or in another medium entirely, openly licensing images helps the Internet be more informative and useful for all of us. Images from WLE in Wales are among the most frequently added to Wikipedia articles, with 51% of this year’s photos added to relevant pages. All of the photographs from this year’s competition can be found here.

Connected Heritage

The Connected Heritage project has come to an end, with so many brilliant outcomes including residencies at cultural institutions and a whole toolkit to learn from. From 2021 to 2023 we worked with partner organisations across the four nations to deliver digital skills training for volunteers, staff and local communities. The project aimed to raise digital skills and confidence across the heritage sector through Wiki training.

One of the most transformative ways in which we worked with partner organisations was through mini Wikimedian residencies. From 2022 to 2023 we worked with both the Royal Albert Memorial Museum (RAMM), and The Mixed Museum, enriching collections data on Wiki platforms. In this work we highlighted the ways in which a step-by-step approach to this kind of change can open up knowledge to the wider community, and bring audiences back to the source institution.

In March 2023, Chamion Caballero, director of The Mixed Museum, Jane Secker and Victoria Araj participated in a roundtable discussion moderated by the Connected Heritage team, as part of the Heritage Dot 2.0 conference hosted by the University of Lincoln. You can view the video here.

The discussion touched on how engagement with Wiki-based projects enabled cultural heritage organisations to improve the accessibility of their collections, while simultaneously empowering volunteers and members through embedded digital upskilling. The Mixed Museum’s Wikipedia edits were discussed as an example of ways that open knowledge can place overlooked cultural histories into the dominant narrative.

To see more of the project’s achievements, you can see Lucy Hinnie’s blog.

Celtic Knot Wikimedia Language Conference 2024

We are very happy to announce that the conference dedicated to minoritized languages on the Wikimedia projects will be back for its 7th edition, to be held in Waterford City, Ireland, in September 2024. The exact date will be announced as soon as possible.

Getting back to its roots in the Celtic languages and nations, the event gathers people from communities and languages that are underrepresented on the Wikimedia projects. It is a place where people working on growing and maintaining their communities can meet, learn from each other, and support each other on topics like community growth, technical tools, or collaboration with partners.

Celtic Knot 2024, will be an in-person event, held in Waterford, Ireland's oldest city which has an abundance of cultural heritage and history. We are exploring options to make conference resources (talks, panels, etc.) available to those who are unable to attend in person.

We are currently gathering input from the community to build a conference tailored to your needs: whether you attended a previous edition of the Celtic Knot or not, if you are involved in underrepresented languages on the Wikimedia Projects, please take a few minutes to fill in the community survey (available in English, Irish and Welsh), and make sure to share the information with your local group. The survey is open until January 21st.

As we are starting to build the concept and the program, we will regularly improve the existing event pages on Meta and post updates on the talk page of the event.

The core organising team is composed of Amy O’Riordan (WCI), Sophie Fitzpatrick (WCI), Daria Cybulska (WMUK), Richard Nevell (WMUK), supported by Léa Lacroix (community engagement consultant).

Climate residency at the Global Systems Institute

With over 324 million annual page views across more than 25,000 climate change-related articles, Wikipedia is one of the largest information sources on climate change in the world. Our resident at the University of Exeter’s Global Systems Institute (GSI), Tatjana Baleta, has spent significant time facilitating researchers and students to improve climate change content on Wikipedia.

To date, the project has trained more than 90 editors in 10 editathons, and articles from Effects of climate change on human health to Tipping Points in the climate system have also undergone review by subject matter experts.

Tatjana has also been engaging lecturers about using Wikimedia platforms as a teaching tool. One MSc Sustainable Solutions student, two undergraduate Biosciences students and one PhD student in Environmental Intelligence are undertaking projects involving Wikipedia.

After a successful first year, the project has secured funding to continue for a second. Find out more about the project here.

Coda article on the impact of OSB on Welsh Wikipedia

The Online Safety Bill passed into law in October, marking the end of our efforts to ensure public interest projects are not damaged by the legislation, and the start of a long process of understanding what compliance will mean in practice for Wikipedia and the other Wikimedia projects. Robin Owain, our Programme Manager for Wales, and Jason Evans, the Open Data Manager for the National Library of Wales, were interviewed by Coda about how the bill could affect their volunteer Wiki work in Wales.

Palestinian history and culture

We spoke to Lucy Moore, winner of the 2022 UK Wikimedian of Year Award, about the editing she’s been doing on the cultural heritage of Palestine. Lucy kept seeing calls from Palestinians on social media for their culture to be shared online as a way for it to be preserved. As a museum professional, Lucy thought the best approach would be to start with Palestinian museums. She started an article for the Palestine Museum of Natural History, which was nominated for the Did You Know section of Wikipedia and received 7889 views on the 1st December. From what Lucy could find online, The Al Qarara Museum has been destroyed. She started an article for it, and in researching for that page she found UNESCO’s listing for Palestine’s intangible heritage. From there Lucy’s created a number of pages on Palestinian culture, but is aware that there are people based abroad who are experts in the field and can advise on Arab names/places. For this reason, Lucy joined an editathon in early December with a group of Wikimedians based in Jordan. The event itself was not only trained editors, but provided important historical and political context to ensure that the edits attendees might contribute took this context into account. It also brought editors together from a range of countries who worked across Wikipedias in different languages. Lucy commented that “digital content can be so fragile, so aggregating sources for others to use on Wikipedia almost feels like a form of digital salvage. For the Al Qarara Cultural Museum, to my knowledge it's not there anymore, with collections largely destroyed, so in some ways it feels like you're writing an epitaph.”

The organisers of the Palestine editathon have created a landing page for those who missed the launch but still want to participate.

Khalili Collections residency

Openly sharing content to the Wikimedia projects is our bread and butter, but it's important to involve native language speakers where possible. With the help of the Islamic Civilization User Group, our resident at the Khalili Collections, Martin Poulter, discovered that an Arabic manuscript had been uploaded to Wikimedia Commons backwards. The manuscript detailed how to treat a tarantula bite with a pomegranate, but the Arabic was impossible to read. The Commons file was quickly reversed and the Wellcome Collection – from where the image was sourced – has updated its own database with the fix.

Volunteers are adding data and links from ArtUK to Wikidata. This query brings up Khalili Collections objects whose ArtUK link has been added to Wikidata. Martin wrote a short briefing for ArtUK on how they can use Wikidata to populate their tags database, and how they can use a bulk data dump to add a lot of their links to Wikidata.

In another example of extended reach, a blog post written by Martin a few years ago has seen a resurgence of interest thanks to the Digital Scriptorium. The Digital Scriptorium is a consortium of researchers from institutions including the University of Oxford and University of Pennsylvania, and they recommended the blog as a starting point for their own work describing pre-modern manuscripts on Wikidata. Further, Toby Burrows of the Bodleian Library wrote an academic paper citing the blog post and arguing that Wikidata could be used to create links between many different catalogues of manuscripts. Wikidata has a new Wikiproject to organise data on manuscripts. As part of this, Martin created a dashboard which shows the number of manuscripts from each collection that Wikidata knows about, with indicators of the data completeness for each collection. The Khalili Collection of Islamic Art presently has 132 manuscripts in this database, putting it ahead of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Queer Britain

This autumn, Queer Britain collaborated with Wikimedia UK to host a Wikimedian in Residence project. From August to November, Evie Moore worked on improving content on Wikipedia and related websites, with a focus on topics relevant to Queer Britain.

One of Evie’s primary tasks during the residency was enhancing the 'LGBT rights in the UK' Wikipedia page, expanding sections on Advocacy Organisations, LGBT representation in politics, Pride Parades, and Rights for Asylum. The comprehensive 1500+ words added aim to provide a well-rounded view of the current landscape of LGBTQ+ rights in the UK. The page is read on average 12,000 times a month so is an important source of information.

You can read Evie’s full blog on the residency here.

‘Doing History in Public’ with Cambridge University Library

In November, Doing History in Public hosted their second editathon in collaboration with Wikimedia UK, Cambridge University Library and Cambridge Department of Digital Humanities. After the successful May editathon, they were excited to build on their skills and introduce new students and staff to Wikipedia editing.

The theme was ‘Out of the Shadows’, bringing underrepresented historical knowledge into the light of Wikipedia. This month’s event had a particularly French and feminist flavour, but also spanned to seventeenth century travel in Peru and Romanian films. For more info and links to the pages created/added to, have a read of Zara Kesterton’s blog.

Train the Trainer

Train the Trainer is a course for volunteers who are keen to deliver Wikipedia editing events. Our recent London weekend with our newest cohort of trainee trainers was a great closing to 2023’s iteration of Train the Trainer. This year we used WikiLearn for the first time as part of the training programme, with a four week course in the run up to the weekend, covering subjects such as off-wiki tools, event management and supporting new editors. On the Saturday we bought a hybrid cohort together to cement that learning, and we'll be taking the next steps with the cohort in the new year. On Sunday we held a session for both the new trainers and our existing trainers on how to lead hybrid sessions, led by our training partner Bhav Patel.

We had the following feedback from some of our trainers:

“At first, I supported other trainers until I was eventually confident enough to lead my own sessions on how to contribute to Wikipedia. They were for professional astronomers and science educators in South Africa - and I was helped online by a couple of other trainers - part of a great community of trained volunteers that Wikimedia UK has built up. It's given me a new way to enjoy sharing knowledge with people and communities in the UK and around the world. And they, in turn, can then use their new skills to share knowledge with others.” – Nick Moyes, Train the Trainer participant

"The best part of volunteering with WMUK is definitely the community. In 2022, I founded the Wikimedia volunteering project at Durham University with the goal of promoting high quality open knowledge about North East England. We succeeded with that goal but what I didn’t expect was the strong sense of community that emerged as students engaged with local history. They really came together to make significant contributions to open knowledge, creating connections with each other and the local community!" – Sophie Whitfield, Train the Trainer participant

“I've been giving Wikipedia trainings in Finland for over a decade now. Last year I joined Wikimedia UK's new team for Wikipedia trainers. I still deliver training in Finland, and I’ve also helped editors from across the world get their start on Wikipedia, such as a university class who were creating and editing articles for local female artists. We’ve worked on inserting citations, and ensuring that the article was easy to read for foreign language speakers who could potentially translate the article for a broader audience.” – Johanna Janhonen, Train the Trainer participant

VocalEyes

We’ve been working with VocalEyes since 2022. They play a vital role in making arts and heritage accessible for blind and visually impaired, D/deaf, hard of hearing, and neurodivergent visitors. They do this in a range of ways, including training and collaborating directly with arts and heritage organisations. They also conduct research on how various sectors are making their venues accessible.

In November, our Programme Manager, Richard Nevell, spoke at their virtual Digital Volunteering Forum. There were also speakers from the Smithsonian Transcription Centre (USA), York Archaeology, Wild Museum, DLNET (Digital Learning Network for the cultural heritage sector), and The British Library. Together we explored impact evaluation, student volunteering and the seamless integration of digital projects into existing volunteer programs.

Sankofa London Schools project

We have been supporting the Sankofa London Schools project since early 2022. Nadege Forde-Vidal is a historian and archeologist. Nadege launched the project and got in touch with us to help the year 9 cohort of students share their work with the unlimited global audience of Wikimedia projects. It’s essentially a local history project with a London focus to explore the lives of men, women and children who escaped enslavement over 300 years ago. The adverts listing rewards for the return of these freedom seekers – available in a database created by the University of Glasgow – allow students to piece together life stories with the help of Nadege and a team of historians, curators and archivists. The Wikimedia projects allow the students to share their work with a global audience, learn to edit, and produce text appropriate for a public platform. The project was featured in a stall at Hounslow council’s celebration for Black History Month in October.

While A-level history students currently volunteer their time to assist the year 9s’ work, the project is expanding in the new year with classes exclusively for A-level students.

Join us

We launched two new social media accounts in October, Tiktok and Mastodon, but you can still find us on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. We’re very grateful to and proud of the network we’ve built around our chapter. You can support the governance of the charity by becoming a member, which will allow you to vote on our board elections at the 2024 AGM on the 21st September. You can also support our projects through a donation, or volunteer on some of the projects above. Our blog has more details on some of the activities mentioned in the newsletter.

[[ Category:Friends' Newsletter ]]