Open Access/2011/April

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Open Access
Issue 2 - April 2011

Editorial

(To come)

Follow Wikimedia UK also on blog.wikimedia.org.uk , and for general discussion join the mailing list at lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediauk-l .

Upcoming events

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Features

Features cover the activities and interests of UK Wikimedians as well as topics related to the UK and/or to Wikimedia UK. Want to write a feature for the next newsletter? Please pitch your idea to editoratwikimedia.org.uk before the 20th of this month.

Short entries

Short entries are one paragraph summaries of recent events and interesting topics. Want to write a short entry for the next newsletter? Please send them to editoratwikimedia.org.uk before the end of this month.
Cancer Research UK Workshop, by (Mike Peel?)
Student Wikipedia Society at Imperial College, by (Vinesh?)

BBC coverage

Bristol Wiki Academy, by Martin Poulter

Saturday 19th March saw a one-day event at the University of Bristol, jointly branded between Wikimedia UK and the University, and organised by Steve Virgin and myself. Attending were representatives from potential partner organisations and the local Somali and Bengali-speaking communities, as well as some students from the city's two universities. After my overview, Alex Stinson explained the Five Pillars, GLAM sector partnerships and the Ambassador programme. Rod Ward spoke about article quality and WikiProjects (see Rod's blog). William Avery demonstrated image uploading. Steve Woods gave a non-technical intro to MediaWiki (see Steve's blog). Roger Bamkin made a very persuasive case for QR codes, placing examples around the room. Jezhotwells was on hand to provide one-to-one help to new users. I spoke to local radio in the morning to promote the event. Matt Jukes of the Medical Research Council blogged favourably: "I think if more people were aware of just how tough the Wikipedia peer-review system was then there would be a lot less nay-sayers. The focus not only on getting things factually correct and well cited but also on the quality of the copy (and even layout) was really impressive."

Wikipedia and Academia, by Martin Poulter

The ongoing survey into Expert barriers to Wikipedia caught the attention of the Guardian, who ran an article on Tuesday 29th March. Mike Peel sent the Guardian a variety of suitable contacts, and the paper chose Mike's own photo and interview to lead the article. The article mentioned a number of ways in which Wikimedia is reaching out to academia, including Wikipedians at Imperial College (see above). Wikipedia's haters piled into the online comments, as did some veteran editors. The article caught the attention of the BBC World Service, who asked the Board for an academic interviewee. They were directed to Rod Ward, who lectures at the University of West of England. The interviewer seemed taken aback when Rod explained that Wikipedians are not paid for their contributions. The programme is currently available on iPlayer, with Rod's interview starting at 35.03 minutes.

Chapters meeting, by (Mike Peel?)

Summary from Manuel Schneider, meta:Wikimedia Conference 2011

About Open Access

Open Access is by and for UK Wikimedians, is edited by ???, and is published under a CC-by-SA license. All images are files from Wikimedia Commons. Their image description pages contain attribution and license information, accessible simply by clicking the image.

Open Access is a publication of Wiki UK Ltd, a company limited by guarantee (Registered No.6741827), trading as Wikimedia UK. The Registered Office is at 23 Cartwright Way, Nottingham NG9 1RL.

Wikimedia UK is the United Kingdom chapter of the Wikimedia Foundation. Wikimedia UK Board trustees are Andrew Turvey (Chair), Michael Peel (Secretary), Thomas Dalton (Treasurer), Joseph Seddon, Steve Virgin. Follow the links to their user pages for contact details. To join or to donate to Wikimedia UK, go to the left-hand sidebar.

Views expressed in this newsletter do not necessarily reflect those of the company.

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