Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh

Welcome
 The University of Edinburgh Residency The University of Edinburgh began a year-long Wikimedian-in-Residence project in January 2016. The success of the residency for the University has meant that it has been extended to three years, until January 2019. It has now been made open-ended. It is the third successive residency to be established in Scotland, following the National Library of Scotland Residency which began in July 2013 and the Museums and Galleries Scotland residency which began in January 2015. The vision of the University of Edinburgh is: The creation, dissemination and curation of knowledge. 

What the residency involves
The University of Edinburgh residency is to facilitate a sustainable relationship between the University and Wikimedia UK to the mutual benefit of both communities through improving knowledge exchange. To do this, the WiR will be an advocate of open knowledge and deliver training events & workshops which will further both the quantity & quality of open knowledge and the university’s commitment to digital literacy. More practically, this will involve arranging & delivering skills-training sessions which will fit in with and, importantly enhance, the learning & teaching within the curriculum. The WiR will also stage events outside the curriculum which will draw on the university’s, and Edinburgh’s, rich history & knowledge. The Resident is based in the Learning, Teaching & Web Services Division within Argyle House, 3 Lady Lawson Street, Edinburgh. For general information about the Wikimedian-in-Residence programme, the following articles may be of interest:


 * Wikimedia UK
 * Wikimedians in Residence article on Wikimedia Outreach
 * Wikipedians in Residence article on Wikipedia
 * Wikipedia at 17
 * Why you should edit Wikipedia

University wins Wikimedia UK's Partnership of the Year award 2018
On 14 July 2018, Wikimedia UK, the national chapter for the global Wikimedia movement, held its Annual General Meeting at the Natural History Museum in London. Each year the AGM recognises individuals of the Wikimedia UK community who have made a recognisable impact and this year it was announced at this year’s event that the University of Edinburgh had been nominated and won for UK Partnership of the Year, as the institution which had stood out in the past year as ‘the most effective Wikimedia and Open Knowledge Advocate’. This is the second time the university has won this accolade following its win in 2016 for hosting the Open Educational Resources conference (OER16) and follows Wikimedian in Residence, Ewan McAndrew, being named UK Wikimedian of the Year in 2017. Other ScotWiki award winners included Delphine Dallison, Wikimedian in Residence at the Scottish Library & Information Council, who won Up and Coming Wikimedian of the Year and Sara Thomas, Scotland Programme Co-ordinator for Wikimedia UK, who received an honourable mention for UK Wikimedian of the Year 2018. Read more about the nominations on Wikimedia UK’s website.



Wikipedia and Open Knowledge: a little light reading

 * 1) Reasons to use Wikipedia
 * 2) Wikipedia and Student Writing – Wiki Edu Blog 14/10/2014
 * 3) Wikipedia's ongoing search for the sum of all human knowledge – Oxford Internet Institute.
 * 4) Wikipedia amplifying impact of Open Access publications – The LSE Impact Blog
 * 5) Wikipedia: The Digital Gateway to Academic Research – Referencing Made Easy Blog site.
 * 6) Brits trust Wikipedia more than the news: survey (CNBC.com)
 * 7) 97% of instructors would teach with Wikipedia again – WikiEdu.org blog 25/03/2016 and The Amazing Ways how Wikipedia uses AI
 * 8) "The Internet’s Favorite Website" – As web traffic shifts toward mobile, a new study finds Wikipedia remains the most popular informational site around.
 * 9) 'Shiver-inducing  contacts with the past' – Bodleian Wikimedian, Martin Poulter, says that the digital world can play a crucial role in sharing those shiver-inducing moments of contact with the past, such as seeing Charles Darwin’s actual handwriting, and libraries can involve more people in that authentic experience.
 * 10) Ten basic rules of editing Wikipedia.
 * 11) Why we’re editing women scientists onto Wikipedia – Nature.com and Using AI to Fix Wikipedia's Gender Problem.
 * 12) Science Is Shaped by Wikipedia: Evidence From a Randomized Control Trial. Research paper about how Wikipedia actively influences science development, providing evidence of causality, instead of the usual correlation. (Video)
 * 13) Your Middle School Teacher was wrong about Wikipedia and Did Media Literacy Backfire?
 * 14) Student Learning Outcomes using Wikipedia-based Assignments Fall 2016 Research Report.
 * 15) Students' use of Wikipedia as an academic resource — Patterns of use and perceptions of usefulness.
 * 16) Updating Wikipedia should be part of all doctors’ jobs
 * 17) Wikipedia, the Last Bastion of Shared Reality and Wikipedia is fixing one of the Internet’s biggest flaws.
 * 18) Wikipedia in Higher Education… How students are shaping the open web.
 * 19) Vandalism on Collaborative Web Communities: An Exploration of Editorial Behaviour in Wikipedia – “Preliminary analysis reveals (∼90%) of the vandalism or foul edits are done by unregistered users… community reaction seemed to be immediate: most vandalisms were reverted within 5 mins on average” – University of Glasgow researchers Alkharashi, A. and Jose, J. (2018)
 * 20) Why Wiki Education’s work combats fake news — and how you can help.

Wikimedia UK and Universities
Wikimedia UK have set up a new website as a central reference point for university educators to find out about Wikipedia in Higher Education including details of past assignments, current assignments and courses planned for the future at universities the length and breadth of the United Kingdom. The page was created in August 2016 but has been populated with a number of examples already; including many from the University of Edinburgh. The intention is that educators can better communicate & co-ordinate their efforts both with Wikimedia UK and with other educators if information is available from a central point of reference.


 * 1) Click here to find out more about Teaching with Wikipedia in Higher Education with examples from the University of Edinburgh.
 * 2) Click here to visit Wikimedia UK's newly created Universities page.
 * 3) Click here to see the Wikimedia Education Dashboard where educators can plan courses and manage student assignments.

Course programmes at the University of Edinburgh involving Wikipedia assignments after year three

 * 1) Research session for Reproductive Biology Honours students. Blog article here. 4th iteration was in September 2018.
 * 2) World Christianity MSc course Blog article here. – 2nd iteration was in 2017–2018 (course leader on research leave in 2018–2019).
 * 3) Undergraduate English Literature Course: Global Modernisms: Inter/National Responses to Modernity (ENLI10369) – one iteration before the residency began in 2016.
 * 4) Translation Studies MSc. Blog article here. Being repeated – Now in its 6th iteration in 2018–2019.
 * 5) Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice (PGCAP) – one iteration in 2016–2017.
 * 6) Introductory Wikipedia project on the Online History MSc – one iteration in Summer 2016.
 * 7) Global Health MSc – First iteration in 2018–2019.
 * 8) Introductory workshop in Digital Sociology MSc – Second iteration to take place this semester in 2018–2019.
 * 9) Introductory workshop with School of Law – first iteration took place in semester one in 2018–2019.
 * 10) Wikidata project in Data Science for Design MSc – Second iteration completed in semester one, 2018–2019.
 * 11) Intellectual Humility (MOOC) – Ongoing Wikipedia component since 2016–2017.

Further collaborations

 * 1) Wikimedia for Online Language Learning as part of MSc in Language Teaching / MSc in TESOL.
 * 2) Psychology in Action MSc – Citizen Science Wikipedia project.
 * 3) Digital Education MSc – Wikipedia workshop mooted for semester two, 2018–2019 session.
 * 4) Open Data project on the Management Science course at the University of Edinburgh Business School to be discussed this semester for 2018–2019 session.
 * 5) Public Health MSc – Wikipedia project mooted for 2019–2020 session.

Wikipedia in the Classroom around the United Kingdom

 * University of Portsmouth: Applied Human Geography. First-year undergraduate core module for BA Human Geography students involving researching & writing new articles about villages in England.
 * University College London: UCL Centre for Translation Studies (CenTraS) ran an event for 36 postgraduate translation studies students.
 * Queen Mary University London: FLM509 Research Methods (Film). Level 5 module. Second-year undergraduate module for BA Film Studies students.
 * Middlesex University: MED3040 Publishing Cultures. Level 6 module. Third year module for BA Publishing and Media students.
 * University of Stirling: Greg Singh taught students to research & write chapters of a new textbook entitled 'The Digital Media and Culture Yearbook' on Wikibooks.
 * University of Warwick: PS364 Human Sexuality – Third year module for BSc Psychology undergraduate students.

Contact Ewan McAndrew, the Wikimedian in Residence for Edinburgh University at ewan.mcandrew@ed.ac.uk if you would like to find out more.

 Background to the residency The University of Edinburgh residency is a result of a long term engagement and also a credit to the quality of the UK Wikimedians and their ability to support, impress and influence senior managers, who in turn, shape institutional strategies and investment. The lead for the partnership at University of Edinburgh is Melissa Highton. When she was Director of Academic IT at University of Oxford her teams attended the editathon organised by JISC (June 2012) to improve articles on | World War One. Oxford holds the Great War Archive and they were keen to ensure, in advance of the centenary, that their collection of open educational resources (OER) could support public engagement and school teaching on the topic.  Martin Poulter was the Wikimedian in Residence at JISC at the time. In 2013 Oxford hosted an editathon for Ada Lovelace Day. Martin Poulter provided training for the event and brought several other Wikimedians to help. Liz McCarthy and Kate Lindsay worked with Martin to make the whole event a great success. Oxford hosted another editathon for Ada Lovelace Day 2014, but by that time Melissa had moved job to become Director of Learning, Teaching and Web Services at University of Edinburgh. There had not yet been any Wikipedia editathons at Edinburgh so Melissa brought her teams to the EduWiki conference  to find out more. Ally Crockford (Wikimedian in Residence at the National Library of Scotland) spoke at the event and she highlighted the WiR scheme. Melissa met with Gill Hamilton (Digital Access Manager at the NLS) to learn about the job descriptions, support and work plans which would be successful for a WiR partnership. Edinburgh University runs an annual Innovative Learning Week designed to enable staff and students to attend day long, or week long events outside of normal timetabling patterns. The first Edinburgh editathon ran during ILW 2015. Ally Crockford and Sara Thomas (Wikimedian in Residence at Museums & Galleries Scotland) came to help deliver the: Women, Science and Scottish History editathon series. Ally was very bold and went for an event spanning the full 4 days. Images from the Women, Science & Scottish History editathon for Innovative Learning Week 2015

“We certainly couldn’t have done it without Ally and Sara but the striking thing for me was how quickly colleagues within the University took to the idea and began supporting each other in developing their skills and sharing knowledge amongst a multi-professional group. This inspired me to commission some academic research to  look at the connections and networking amongst the participants and to explore whether editathons were a good investment in developing workplace digital skills. This is the research I presented at Martin’s Wikipedia Science Conference which underpinned my business case for establishing a WiR at University of Edinburgh with focus on skills development as part of the University’s commitment to open knowledge.“

“I have been repeatedly impressed by the quality of the Wikimedians and the generosity of their host organisations to help at events. It seems to me only fair that University of Edinburgh which has benefitted so much from our local WiRs should now host a WiR to continue a sustained involvement with the scheme and the Wikimedia UK community. Once Edinburgh has shown the way I hope the other Scottish universities will follow suit to ensure that there is always at least one WiR for the nation.” – Melissa Highton – Director of Learning, Teaching & Web Services at University of Edinburgh.  Events and Workshops The Resident will be organising a variety of events, including edit-a-thons and training sessions, during the course of the residency.

If you're interested in running an event with the Wikimedian in Residence, please get in contact through Ewan McAndrew's talk page. Or alternatively, you can email: ewan.mcandrew@ed.ac.uk or follow/message me on Twitter: @emcandre For details of past events such as our Spy Week:Women in Espionage editathon and our Eurostemcell editathon please visit the Events page

Projects in Development
Discussions & preparations are under way to deliver the following projects. Any expressions of interest in helping with these events would be welcome along with any suggestions on individuals or groups, either within the university or outwith the university, who maybe interested in either attending these events or assisting in their preparation would also be welcome.

Project Ideas

 * 1) The Kelvin Hall relaunch (in Glasgow)
 * 2) International Alumni project – Celebrating the international students who studied at Edinburgh University and gone on to have a huge impact abroad.
 * 3) International Development editathon for students.
 * 4) Mastercard Foundation Scholars Program – editathon and Swahili translate-a-thon
 * 5)  World Music Day editathon
 * 6)  International Nurses Day
 * 7) Vet School Wikipedia research session – Edit-a-thon event for Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies students to research & create new Wikipedia articles on Veterinary Medicine.
 * 8) Engineering – 150th Anniversary editathon

Changing the way stories are told
Wikipedia has a problem with systemic bias. A suggests that on English Wikipedia around 90% of editors are male, and are typically formally educated, in white-collar jobs (or students) and living in the Global North. This means that the articles within Wikipedia typically reflect this bias. For example only 17.8% of biographies in English Wikipedia are of women. Many articles reflect the perspective of English speakers in the northern hemisphere, and many of the topics covered reflect the interests of this relatively small group of editors. Wikipedia needs a diverse community of editors to bring diverse perspectives and interests.

Women in Science and Scottish history – the Edinburgh Seven
The very first Wikipedia editathon hosted at the University of Edinburgh was Women in Science and Scottish History in February 2015 and was focused on the Edinburgh Seven, the first group of matriculated undergraduate female students at any British university. As a research-based institution, Professor Allison Littlejohn from the Open University was invited to come along to the event to help us make sure there was value in a collaboration with Wikimedia UK and to analyse what was going on in these editing events and what their impact actually was. And what she discovered was that there was indeed genuine formal and informal learning going on at these events and she’s produced two research papers arising from that 1 event. Wikipedia's women problem – Melissa Highton writes for the Dangerous Women project At the University of Edinburgh, the Wikimedia residency's focus on redressing this imbalance has proved to be a successful approach with women editors accounting for 65% of our attendees this year and 69% in year two. Another problem of coverage on Wikipedia has been the representation of different language Wikipedias with English Wikipedia the largest of all the 295 different language Wikipedias by a considerable margin. Hence, it has been especially pleasing that Translation Studies MSc students and Edinburgh University Translation Society have embraced the need to redress the imbalance by translating content from one language Wikipedia to another.
 * 1) Does a formal wiki event contribute to the formation of a network of practice? A social capital perspective on the potential for informal learning. This paper looked at the formation of networks of practice and social capital through participation in an editathon. Through Allison’s work we learned that activity did not stop after the editathon event and participants did see it as an important part of their professional development.
 * 2) Becoming an online editor: perceived roles and responsibilities of Wikipedia editors. The second paper looked at the process of becoming a Wikipedia editor – and how participants felt editing was a form of knowledge activism and helped generate important discussions about how knowledge is created, curated and contested online and how Wikipedia editors can positively impact on the knowledge available to people all around the world and addressing those knowledge gaps.

Addressing the Gender Gap on Wikipedia
Read Mary Susan McIntosh and the Women in Red – Lorna Campbell. Further reading:
 * We held events for International Women's Day in 2017 (Women writers); International Women's day 2018 (Suffragettes); Black History Month 2017, Ada Lovelace Day 2017 (Women in STEM with a special focus on Women in Chemistry and the nineteen Women Chemists who petitioned the Chemistry Society in 1904; Women in Medicine; Women in Anthropology; Women Human Rights Defenders, Lost Literary Women; Women Artists; and International Nurses Day. All these events had a strong focus to address the gender gap on Wikipedia and create new role models for young and old alike.
 * Wikipedia Women in Red editathons are held every month at the university to allow Wikipedia editors a place to come and gain further practice and advice in a supportive environment but also to focus on the creation of pages about notable women missing from Wikipedia to help address the content gender gap where only 17.7% of biography articles are about women.
 * Wikipedia Women in Red editing is part of the new 4 year Athena SWAN action plan at the university with a focus on improving the visibility of female role models in ten academic disciplines.
 * To celebrate 100 years since the Representation of the People Act (1918) gave some women the vote, we held three #Vote100 Wikipedia editing events. 34 brand new biography articles have now surfaced on Wikipedia about Scotland’s suffragettes and the Eagle House suffragettes, along with 220 improved pages and items of data so people can discover all about their lives and contributions.
 * New pages created for the suffragettes who visited Eagle House (suffragette's rest). Eagle House became an important refuge for suffragettes who had been released from Holloway prison after hunger strikes. Many major people from the suffragette movement were invited to stay at Eagle house and to plant a tree to celebrate a prison sentence — at least 47 trees were planted between April 1909 and July 1911, including Emmeline Pankhurst, Christabel Pankhurst, Annie Kenney, Charlotte Despard, Millicent Fawcett and Lady Constance Bulwer-Lytton. Read more in the Histropedia timeline.
 * New Wikipedia pages telling the stories of the Scottish suffragettes have been created including: Maude Edwards slashing the portrait of King George V at the Royal Scottish Academy and her defiance at trial; the force-feeding of Frances Gordon and Arabella Scott at Perth Prison by the doctor who was “emotionally hooked” to Arabella Scott and offered to escort her to Canada. The attempted arson conducted by pioneer doctor Dorothea Chalmers Smith, the Aberdonian suffragette & organiser, Caroline Phillips, being sacked by telegram by Christabel Pankhurst, and the “energetic little woman from Stranraer” Jane Taylour who was a firebrand lecturer on Women’s Suffrage touring up and down Scotland and England. Read more in the Histropedia timeline (external website).
 * Mary Susan McIntosh (1936–2013) sociologist, feminist, political activist and campaigner for lesbian and gay rights in the UK featured as a ‘Did You Know‘ fact was on Wikipedia’s front page on 11 May 2017. The front page is viewed, on average, 25 million times a day. Mary’s page was only written on 8 March 2017 during our International Women’s Day event here at the University of Edinburgh by one of our attendees, Lorna Campbell. Mary’s page has now been viewed in excess of 10,500 times because a) editors were motivated to address Wikipedia’s gender gap problem where less than 15% of editors are female and less than 18% of biographies are of notable women and b) we felt Mary’s story was important enough that it should be shared on Wikipedia’s front page and introduced to an audience of up to 25 million.
 * 1) 'Wikipedia, research and representation- – Dr Amy Burge, Academic Developer at the Institute for Academic Development, University of Edinburgh.
 * 2) What do you do with a dead chemist? – Anne-Marie Scott.
 * 3) Why we’re editing women scientists onto Wikipedia – and why you should, too, say Jess Wade and Maryam Zaringhalam.
 * 4) You can’t be what you can’t see.- Creating new role models on Wikipedia to encourage the next generation of Immodest Women by Siobhan O’Connor, Dr. Alice White, Dr. Sara Thomas and Ewan McAndrew.
 * 5) Women scientists being whitewashed from Wikipedia.
 * 6) From Chinese spies to award-winning geologists, we’re making women visible on Wikipedia

Press about the residency

 * 1) Edinburgh University searches for 'Wikimedians' – Edinburgh Evening News, 8 October 2015.
 * 2) University of Edinburgh to employ ‘Wikimedian in Residence’ web editor – The Student Newspaper.org, 13 October 2015.
 * 3) The History of Medicine gets mentioned in the ILW Awards 2016
 * 4) The OER16 Conference, co-chaired by Melissa Highton and Lorna M. Campbell, won Wikimedia UK’s Partnership of the Year Award
 * 5) 'Wikidata and Wikisource Showcase' mentioned on IS News site.
 * 6) The Wikimedia Residency, as part of the University Of Edinburgh's Open Education team, won 3rd place in ALT's Learning Technologist of the Year awards.
 * 7) Open Education team (including Wikimedia residency) come third in ALT Learning Technologist of the Year awards – story on the IS News site.
 * 8) Wikipedia's women problem – Melissa Highton writes for the Dangerous Women project 10 October 2016
 * 9) STV News 'Live at Five' covers the Ada Lovelace Day – Women in STEM Wikipedia editathon.
 * 10) New College take on Wikipedia edit-a-thon – Women and Religion 2 November 2016.
 * 11) Brenda Moon remembered in Wikipedia editathon – article in IS News
 * 12) Wikipedia editathon and Mary Stewart – Edinburgh Gothic Sat 12 November.
 * 13) Wikipedia editathon at the University of Sheffield's Centre for the History of the Gothic
 * 14) Collaborating to built a city of information literacy, a city of Wikipedia – Interview by OEPS Scotland
 * 15) #1Lib1Ref at the University of Edinburgh – Blog article by Gavin Willshaw, Digital Curator – 2 February 2017
 * 16) Fake News and Wikidata – a roundup of the Wikimedia UK Education Summit
 * 17) Host a Wikimedian – You can't afford not to (blog article)
 * 18) 'Wikipedia, research and representation- – Dr Amy Burge, Academic Developer at the Institute for Academic Development, University of Edinburgh.
 * 19) Mary Susan McIntosh and the Women in Red – Lorna Campbell.
 * 20) What do you do with a dead chemist? – Anne-Marie Scott.
 * 21) Wikipedia and Writing – Michael Seery, Reader in Education, School of Chemistry, University of Edinburgh.
 * 22) Language and Politics – my takeaways by Mina Theofilatou.
 * 23) How is it almost August? – Lorna Campbell.
 * 24) While in Scotland – Käbi Suvi, Wikimedia Estonia.
 * 25) Celtic Knot Conference 2017 in Edinburgh – Astrid Carlsen, Wikimedia Norge.
 * 26) Wikipedia in the Classroom: developing information literacy, online citizenship and digital research skills – Teaching Matters blog 13 June 2017.
 * 27) Congratulations to our Wikimedian of the Year – Wikimedia UK blog 1 August 2017.
 * 28) University of Edinburgh journal vol.48 no.1 – Article about the Edinburgh residency on p.25
 * 29) Ada Lovelace Day 2017 – celebrating Women in STEM – article on the WiR blog on 1 September 2017.
 * 30) Scotland loves monuments – article for Wiki Loves Monuments 2017 on the Wir Blog – Friday 8 September 2017.
 * 31) Wanderings with a Wikimedian – Blog article by Anne-Marie Scott for Wiki Loves Monuments 2017 – Monday 11 September 2017.
 * 32) Mortuary Chapel, Revisited – Anne-Marie Scott's blog 30 September 2017.
 * 33) Ada Lovelace Day – Professor Elizabeth Slater – Lorna Campbell's blog on 10 October 2017.
 * 34) Ada Lovelace Day – knitting resources
 * 35) Ada Lovelace Day 2017 photos.
 * 36) Wikipedia is a very lovely place to be – Anne-Marie Scott's blog.
 * 37) The 17th century map of Iceland released by the University of Edinburgh's Centre for Research Collections gets a mention in Creative Commons' influential 'State of the Commons report'.
 * 38) Wikipedia has always depended on the kindness of strangers – Outcomes of Ada Lovelace 2017 on the Wikimedian in Residence blog 19 October 2017.
 * 39) Wikipedia assignments – getting past the ‘Penguin effect’ and down to the brass tacks of sharing open knowledge – Teaching Matters blog.
 * 40) Ada Lovelace Day 2017 – Celebrating women in STEM – Edinburgh University Science Magazine.
 * 41) Another Story about Maps – Blogpost by Anne-Marie Scott 27 October 2017.
 * 42) Open Tumshies for Halloween – blogpost by Lorna Campbell 31 October 2017.
 * 43) Internet Transmitted Infections – I’ve got the SPLOTS – Anne-Marie Scott, 16 November 2017.
 * 44) Wikidata in the Classroom on the Wikimedian in Residence blog 22 November 2017.
 * 45) Open for all – Mansfield Traquair images hosted on Wikimedia Commons. Blog by Anne-Marie Scott 23 November 2017.
 * 46) Take an Equal Bite – Blogpost by Melissa Highton about EqualBITE: Gender equality in higher education and the the positive power of wikipedia editathons. 2 December 2017.
 * 47) Wikipedia Games / SPLOTPoint – Anne-Marie Scott blog, 1 January 2018.
 * 48) 2017 Highs, Lows and Losses – Lorna Campbell blog, 3 January 2018
 * 49) Wikipedia at 17 – Facts matter. – 16 January 2018.
 * 50) Reflections on International Women’s Day 2018 and Wikipedia – A Gude Cause – 8 March 2018.
 * 51) New SPLOT Wikidata tutorial – Wikidata Basics.
 * 52) Collaborated with John Lubbock at Wikimedia UK to produce Wikimedia UK blogpost: Data on the history of Scottish witch trials added to Wikidata on 9 March 2018.
 * 53) Libraries, Literacies & Learning – presentation at SCURL event 23 March 2018
 * 54) Digital Transformation and Data — The Wikimedia Residency at the University of Edinburgh on Medium.com
 * 55) Wikimedia resources – how to get started.
 * 56) The OER 18 EdTech editathon 'SPLOT' resource.
 * 57) Wikimedia at the Open Educational Resources Conference 2018
 * 58) Whit’s fur ye’ll no go by ye – reflection on 12 months by Ruth Jenkins, Academic Support Librarian at the University of Edinburgh Medical School.
 * 59) Wikipedia in Higher Education (co-authored with Jemima John, 4th year Law undergraduate student.
 * 60) Wikipedia in Higher Education… How students are shaping the open web.
 * 61) Tracings (don’t look too closely)
 * 62) NEW SPLOT resource created for the Wikidata Workshop at the Digital Day of Ideas.
 * 63) NEW 'SPLOT' resource for running a Wikipedia translation workshop created for the Celtic Knot 2018 conference at the National Library of Wales on 5-6 July.
 * 64) NEW 'SPLOT' resource for running a Wikipedia 'micro' editathon workshop initially created by the resident and then Academic Support Librarian colleagues tailored & populated the resource for use at the EAHIL conference in Cardiff on 13 July.
 * 65) Wikipedia in the Classroom – how students are shaping the open web – Teaching Matters blog
 * 66) Case study about the Wikidata in the Classroom project on the Data Science for Design MSc course. Uploaded to Wikimedia Commons and shared in Wikidata Status Updates.
 * 67) Towards Open-ish? – a hybrid conversation organised as part of the Wikimania conference in Cape Town.
 * 68) Languages – blog about whether other language Wikipedias should refer to all places in Scotland by their Gaelic names.
 * 69) Newspapers – created a Wikipedia page as part of Mike Caulfield’s Newspapers on Wikipedia project.
 * 70) Reflections on CELT Symposium 2018 – includes mention of our Open Content Curation Student Interns and the Wikimedia in the Classroom initiatives.
 * 71) The Soul of Liberty: Openness, Equality and Co-creation – transcript of Lorna Campbell's keynote at CELT 2018 – includes Wikipedia in the classroom initiatives and Wikidata projects at the University of Edinburgh.
 * 72) Circular Records Hall on Atlas Obscura – one of Lorna's photographs was featured in Atlas Obscura. It was one that she uploaded to Wikimedia Commons as part of the Wiki Loves Monuments competition last year.
 * 73) What I did on my holidays – taking pictures for Wiki Loves Monuments.
 * 74) Academia and Wikipedia – a presentation at Maynooth University on 18 June 2018.
 * 75) Celebrating 100 years of Votes for Women
 * 76) Ada Lovelace Day 2018 – nominate Women in STEM heroines.
 * 77) Open.Ed – OER and Open Knowledge at the University of Edinburgh.
 * 78) Wikidata in the Classroom and the WikiCite project – presentation at Repository Fringe 2018.
 * 79) University wins Wikimedia UK’s Partnership of the Year award
 * 80) University of Edinburgh wins Wikimedia UK Partnership of the Year Award.
 * 81) Open.Ed at RepoFringe18
 * 82) Scotland loves Monuments 2018
 * 83) Wiki Loves Monuments 2018
 * 84) The internet’s favourite website for information.
 * 85) How to run a Wikipedia editathon – a workshop for health information professionals at the EAHIL conference – This post was authored by Ruth Jenkins, Academic Support Librarian at the University of Edinburgh.
 * 86) Ada Lovelace Day – 1 month to go!
 * 87) Facts and Fallacies: Cultural Representations of Mental Health
 * 88) Edinburgh Gothic for Robert Louis Stevenson Day 2018
 * 89) Witchy Wikidata – a 6th birthday celebration event for Halloween
 * 90) Editing Wikipedia as part of teaching public health? by Felix Stein, by Global Health MSc course leader at the University of Edinburgh.
 * 91) JISC Case study:Wikimedia in the curriculum – addressing the challenges of digital and information literacy, digital scholarship and open knowledge at the University of Edinburgh.
 * 92) The New Statesman:From Chinese spies to award-winning geologists, we’re making women visible on Wikipedia – co-authored with Siobhan O'Connor, Sara Thomas and Alice White.
 * 93) Wikimedian in Residence blog:You can’t be what you can’t see – creating new role models on Wikipedia to encourage the next generation of #ImmodestWomen.
 * 94) Women scientists being whitewashed from Wikipedia – Ewan McAndrew, Siobhan O’Connor, Dr Sara Thomas and Dr Alice White
 * 95) International Women’s Day 2019
 * 96) Recruiting a Witchfinder General
 * 97) Women and Wikipedia….Open Learning and a hobby for life!
 * 98) Translation and Open Education – An Experiment using Wikipedia
 * 99) Wikipedia in Higher Education: How students are shaping the open web
 * 100) Diversifying Wikipedia for the Festival of Creative Learning 2019
 * 101) JISC case study – Wikimedia in the curriculum: Addressing the challenges of digital and information literacy, digital scholarship and open knowledge at the University of Edinburgh

Reports
 Resources

Tools
More tools and Wikidata queries can be found on User:Stinglehammer.
 * 1) A tool which 'scores' a Wikipedia page. (tick the checkbox for WP10 once you've selected enwiki from the dropdown menu)
 * 2) Citation Hunt tool
 * 3) Google Books citation tool
 * 4) Plagiarism detector

Videos

 * The Wikimedian in Residence channel on Media Hopper now has 299 videos and video tutorials.


 * The Wikimedian in Residence channel on Youtube now has accrued over 59,000 views of its 69 videos from 168 countries around the world with 258 subscribers.

Getting started with Wikipedia

 * University of Edinburgh Tutorial: Wikipedia Basics
 * Editing Wikipedia (pdf booklet)
 * What’s where on Wiki (pdf)
 * Building a brilliant page (pdf)
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper: Wikipedia editing in under 25 mins. (playlist of 18 videos)
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper: How easy is Wikipedia's new Visual Editor interface – 5 min walkthrough
 * Wikipedia’s own tutorial using the (old) Source Editor – The Wikipedia Adventure.
 * Wikipedia’s training library using the new Visual Editor interface.
 * Wikipedia and Academic Research (pdf handout)
 * Presentations by the University of Edinburgh’s Wikimedian in Residence.
 * University of Edinburgh – comprehensive page of resources.
 * Building a biography article (pdf) and simplified version (pdf).
 * Draft biography article by way of exemplar.
 * More one page handouts inc. how to move your article out of your sandbox.
 * Adding infoboxes to Wikipedia (pdf handout)

Getting started as a Wikipedia Trainer/Course leader

 * The OER 18 EdTech editathon 'SPLOT' resource (exemplar of how to structure an editathon)
 * Lesson plan and accompanying slidedeck – How to conduct Wikipedia editing training. (TES.com)
 * Lesson plan and accompanying slidedeck – Wikimedia Commons
 * Instructor Basics – How to use Wikipedia as a teaching tool (pdf booklet)
 * Example marking rubric (pdf handout).
 * Wikipedia’s Program & Events dashboard (easy to use platform for managing assignments).
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper – How to use the Programs and Events Dashboard.
 * Wikipedia and Academic Research (pdf handout)
 * The TeachWiki folder of resources (Google drive)
 * University of Edinburgh – comprehensive page of resources. Inc. subject specific handouts
 * How universities are teaching with Wikipedia ([[File:Case_Studies,_How_instructors_are_teaching_with_Wikipedia_(Wiki_Education_Foundation).pdf|thumb|pdf booklet]])
 * Case studies of Wikipedia in the Classroom courses at the University of Edinburgh.

Getting started with Wikimedia Commons – the free & open media repository

 * Illustrating Wikipedia (pdf booklet)
 * Contributing to Wikimedia Commons – a University of Edinburgh guide (pdf).

Getting started with Wikidata – the free & open knowledgebase of structured linked open data

 * University of Edinburgh online Tutorial – Wikidata Basics
 * Wikidata for beginners (pdf handout).
 * Playlist of 65 videos on Media Hopper. Including:
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper – Wikidata SPARQL query tutorial
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper – Building SPARQL queries.
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper – QuickStatements: adding mass edits to Wikidata
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper – Adding manual edits to Wikidata – how to add statements with verifiable data and how to create items on Wikidata
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper – Mass edits on Wikidata – how to use Google spreadsheets and Quickstatements to add mass edits to Wikidata

Getting started with Wikisource – the free digital

 * University of Edinburgh Tutorial: Wikisource Basics
 * Playlist of 15 Wikisource videos on Media Hopper.
 * Condensed guide to Wikisource (pdf).

Wikipedia Games

 * University of Edinburgh Tutorial – Wiki Games
 * Gamifying Wikimedia – learning through play (slides)
 * Video tutorial on Media Hopper – Histropedia “the timeline of everything”.

Lots more resources can be found on the Resources page.  About the Wikimedia projects Wikimedia is a global movement whose mission is to bring free educational content to the world. Wikimedia is the collective name for the Wikimedia movement, revolving around a group of inter-related projects, including Wikipedia, Wikidata, Wikimedia Commons and others, which aim to use the collaborative power of the Internet, and the wiki concept, to create and share free knowledge of all kinds.

 Year two of the residency – 24 months in review

<div style="width:100%; background:#17a589; border: 0 solid #17a589; white-space: nowrap; text-align: left; padding: 5px 15px 15px 15px"> <h2 style="color:#c0392b>Year one of the residency – 12 months in review