Talk:Academic Dress editathon

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Revision as of 21:25, 28 May 2013 by HJ Mitchell (talk | contribs) (→‎Report: fix link)
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GLAM?

Why is this event tagged GLAM? Am I missing something? If anything I'd have thought it should be tagged Education. --Toni Sant (WMUK) (talk) 12:55, 24 April 2013 (UTC)

I've changed the navbox from {{Cultural partnerships}} to {{Education}}. -- Katie Chan (WMUK) (talk) 13:11, 24 April 2013 (UTC)
Ah, the power of experience. Thanks! --Toni Sant (WMUK) (talk) 13:44, 24 April 2013 (UTC)

Useful images for academic dress and specific universities

Report

This event came about after one of the regulars at the Coventry meetup (who is also a trustee of the Burgon Society) approached Rock drum and myself. It was planned to be similar in structure to the Coventry History Editathon held at the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum in March 2012. The society's chairman very kindly arranged for us to use the facilities at Deloitte for the event. Approximately 14 people were present, divided almost equally between newbies and those with some previous editing experience.

The first hour or so was given over to general discussion and thumbing through Welcome to Wikipedia booklets as we were unable to access Deloitte's WiFi. As it became clear that the WiFi would not be available in time for a productive editathon, those with smartphones enabled them as mobile hotspots, and between three smartphones there was sufficient capacity for everybody to connect. With Internet access established, we began in earnest by discussing articles that attendees wished to work on and showing several of these on a projector. Most attendees were keen to work on articles related to the academic dress at particular institutions, often those they had attended, and the articles for academic dress at the universities of, inter alia, Newcastle, Durham, Westminster, Exeter, and Warwick were mentioned. After a comparison and discussion of several articles, we demonstrated some basic edits and discussed encyclopaedic writing and attendees were encouraged to find an article to work on with an experienced Wikipedian in the afternoon session.

After lunch, we set about editing. The attendees worked individually or in groups of two or three, in each case assisted by a more experienced Wikipedian, to improve articles using resources provided or that they had accessed online. One group was assisted by Toni and Nicholas, who tidied the article while the others continued to work on it. Improvements were made to:

Several attendees said they were inspired to continue working on articles after the event and that they felt the event made the prospect of editing less daunting. I distributed my contact details and invited attendees to get in touch with any questions, and I will encourage at least one attendee who lives near an existing meetup to come to the next one. Discussion of similar events in the future has already begun in principle.

The sole recommendation of this report for Wikimedia UK would be that the charity purchase a "MiFi" device or similar for future events where WiFi may be problematic. Harry Mitchell | Penny for your thoughts? 20:24, 28 May 2013 (UTC)