Volunteering Portal: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Deryck.webm|thumb| | [[File:Deryck.webm|thumb|600px|Wikimedian Deryck Chan on being a volunteer|center]] [[File:Natalie Chan.webm|thumb|600px|Wikimedian Natalie Chan on being a volunteer|center]] | ||
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Revision as of 16:47, 2 August 2016
Volunteer with Wikimedia UK
I have been a contributor to Wikimedia projects
Featured volunteer story
I first got involved with Wikimedia UK when I attended TedX Bristol in 2011. Roger Bamkin and Steve Virgin were there talking about the project that had been done at Derby Museum - where QRpedia codes linking to articles had been placed on exhibits. I wanted to reuse and expand upon their idea for my hometown of Monmouth in Wales. The project grew to become MonmouthpediA. I became a volunteer because Wikimeda were doing something amazing - and I didn't need permission to join in. It's easy to organise a Wikimedia event with a host organisation. Often host organisations will come up with the idea for an event, but Wikimedians are very welcome to initiate projects themselves - it's what I did in Monmouth. Once a host organisation understands the ubiquitous nature of Wikipedia (Wikimedia projects get 21 billion page views per month) and that they are able to make it a richer resource it becomes a very easy conversation to have. I have received lots of support from Wikimedia UK, like advice on how to run events and projects, loans of equipment, funding for projects and desk space in their office when I need it! If I could offer advice to people who want to run an event, it would be to try to attend an event before you run one yourself, and to teach someone you know before trying to teach strangers, maybe friends or family, try to pick people with different levels of computer literacy. And most importantly, be specific about what you want to achieve running an event.
I am new to Wikimedia projectsFeatured volunteer projectThe Wikipedia voice intro project is a project by Wikipedia editor Andy Mabbett to make audio recordings in which Wikipedia subjects - whether they are celebrities like Stephen Fry, or those notable for other activities like scientists or artists - say their name and introduce themselves in a short segment lasting around ten seconds or so. The recordings are then uploaded to Wikimedia Commons and shown on the subject's Wikipedia article, so that readers know what the person sounds like and how to correctly pronounce their names. Aside from Stephen Fry, contributors to the project so far include lunar astronaut Charlie Duke and British peer Jim Knight. You can find all of the voice recording made for the project so far on Wikimedia Commons. A related project that Andy has been working on is the BBC voice project where the corporation is releasing hundreds of audio snippets of notable people talking recorded on some of their radio programmes over the years. At an event at New Broadcasting House on 18 January 2014, over three hundred suitable clips were identified by volunteers, which the BBC are in the process of reviewing, processing, and uploading to Wikimedia Commons. Examples of clips that have been uploaded and used on the English Wikipedia include that of World Wide Web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi. Things you can do
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