Wikimedians in Residence Exchange Network/minutes 2019 08 18
Appearance
The Wikimania 2019 Wikimedians in Residence in-person meetup happened at the conference hotel on Sunday 18 August 2019.
Details
[edit]Wikimedians in Residence User Group! We want to exchange ideas, techniques, tools. Join the WiR Exchange Network on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1625703517453016/
Original notes taken in Etherpad
Thanks Kevin / User:SuperHamster
Attendees
[edit]- Richard (Pharos) @ the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
- Kevin from Ohio, working on WikiProject Cleveland Museum of Art.
- Kelly, based in London. Making African Connections in the University of Sussex. Return and restoration of objects taken from the African continent.
- Lane (Bluerasberry) @ University of Virginia. Moving citations into Wikidata to support scientific research.
- ?GLAM coordinator in Finland. Running a depict-a-thon in North Finland.
- @ University of ?
- Hilary Thorsen Stanford with the Linked Data 4 Production project. Grant-based project integrating library and metadata.
- Simon Cobb @ National Library of Wales
- Ian Borim with Morocco/Arabia, Interested in getting more involved with GLAM.
- Linda Fletcher with AfroCROWD in New York. Currently training folks with references and books. Recent project: 100th anniversary of the Red Summer of 1919; have ordered lots of books and having reference sessions to develop citations.
- Sherry, Program Director for AfroCROWD in New York. Also organizing for Caribbean Wikimedians. Would like to do more with GLAM.
- Maria RImmel from the Ohio Wikimedians User Group. Also working on WikiProject Cleveland Museum of Art.
- Sannita Library in Italy; was also part time with music. Interested in WikiCite (has attended 3 times).
- William from Connecticut. Interested in museums and libraries.
- Jeffrey Keefer from Wikimedia New York City. WiR with the Health Funder; one of the largest funders of healthcare research.
- Jason, WiR @ National Library of Wales
- ?WiR @ the National Library of Wales
- ?, European Library of Cultural Heritage
Scope Discussion
[edit]- Richard: What is our scope? What are our responsibilities? We should come up with a real definition.
- Ian: How do people get involved? How to relationships get started?
- Richard: Has been working with various NYC institutions (e.g. photo contests with museums, edit-a-thons, etc.).
- Part-time work is more likely than full time.
- Kelly asks about making cultural changes within institutions.
- It can be difficult to report on changes since it's intenal processes.
- Richard mentinons how Wikimedia brings various "departments" together; can try to do that within institutions as well.
- Is it necessary to have database skills?
- Nope!
- Soft skills are important. Need to be persuasive to implement change.
- Can seek technical help and support from others (e.g. your affiliate) when needed.
- Can bring on more technical WiRs once the "soft skills" part of the relationship (establishing new policies, programs, etc.) is done.
- Kelly mentions the difference between public and private institutions; powerful vs. less powerful institutions. Different nuances to consider.
- Oral history can be significant; intangible heritage. It's an opportunity not all WiRs are considering.
- Not all institutions need to implement their own digital collections (cost!); you can teach institutions about using things like the Internet Archive, free licenses, help upload to Commons, etc.
- Important consideration for smaller institutions. Saving money and effort is appealing.
- Kelly: There's a scale. Theres's different access to power and resources.
- Have visiting scholars worked in countries other than the US?
- Kelly: Visiting scholars is a project from Wiki Edu, which only supports projects in US, sometimes Canada. Is there an opportunity for us to support visiting scholars outside of the US/Canada?
- Once a year, UK pitches to various institutions the benefits of getting a WiR, uploading to bulk to Wikimedia, doing a 2-3 day training, et.c
- Let's stream to get people involved around the world, especially from smaller institutions.
- Kelly: "Wikimedians at Large" are responsible for more than just an institution; they are responsive to an entire country or region.
- Concept of "digital champions" which have strong knowledge and Wikimedia skills. Facebook Live sessions to record and serve as a resource in the future.
- Some instituions might not be receptive.
- "This is how we do things; you [Wikimedians] should adapt"
- You may need to connect with the right people.
- Consider cultural barriers; the people who can make changes might not be receptive to "outsiders".
- Richard: What about a new experimental space to create new wikis? Wikispore! https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikispore
- Oral history
- Cultural information that might not be able to fit in Wikipedia's content guidelines (sources)
- Might be viable for some GLAMs
- Possibilities to build into Wikidata (e.g. Wikidata items could link back to WikiSpore items, as they do for Wikipedia entries, etc.
- Kelly: WikiOral! Covers oral tradition and unwritten languages. There seems to be a significant apetite for this.
- Discussion being led by the Diversity Working Group.
- A number of suggestions have been made to incorporate some of these issues that touch on notability, types of knowledge not transmitted in text, etc.
- Take a look at the strategy recommendations and give feedback! Especially for the Diversity Working Group recommedations: :https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Strategy/Wikimedia_movement/2018-:20/Recommendations