User:Phoebe
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
-
- Hello! And welcome. My name is Phoebe Ayers. I am a librarian, currently based in
Seattle, WashingtonDavis, California. I'm a native English speaker. I've been writing about, editing and using Wikipedia on and off since August 2003 (with a couple extended breaks, when my life was rudely interrupted by graduate school). There is always something else I want to do.
- Hello! And welcome. My name is Phoebe Ayers. I am a librarian, currently based in
I work on Wikipedia, but I also talk about it a lot; I give a fair number of presentations about the site, particularly to librarian groups, and I am happy to share my notes. I am also interested in Wikip/media research. I worked on Wikimania 2006 (see below), also worked on Wikimania 2007, helped choose the location for Wikimania 2008 (and Wikimania 2009!) and am interested in events, outreach, and teaching Wikipedia (and wikis) generally. I'm writing a book about Wikipedia as well, due to be published in 2008.
I am interested in good essays about Wikipedia; please add them to essays.
[edit] Things I do around here
Ah who cares you always end up in the city"
- Editor on en:wp since August 2003
-
- I especially work on historical scientific biographies and related topics; plus a smattering of whatever. I care about the library articles and core topics, and have historically worked on marine science articles. I like doing merges. Lately I've been doing a lot of work on biographies, both old and new. I am one of approximately eleven people who adores fact-checking and referencing.
- I was the program co-coordinator for Wikimania 2006.
- ... and consequently, was on the bid selection committee for Wikimania 2007, and am on the program and scholarships committee for Taipeimania!!!.
- Was again on the Foundation Wikimania bid jury for 2008; cf m:Wikimania 2008. Wikimania 2008 will be in Alexandria, Egypt in July 2008; I'm helping out a bit with the program and scholarships again, though not as much as last year.
- For m:Wikimania 2009, I'm not on the bid jury due to time constraints, but I am one of the jury moderators -- basically I'm reminding everyone to show up to meetings. Update: Buenos Aires will host Wikimania 2009! Congratulations to the winning team.
- I'm interested in and participate in Wikipedia and wiki research. I presented a short paper at m:Wikimania 2005; recently completed a literature review of ongoing research that will be presented at ASIS&T'06; and helped with a hugely successful research BoF at Wikimania '06.
- I was the "Wikimedia liason" for WikiSym '07, and was on the program committee. I'm also on the program committee for WikiSym 2008, to be held in Porto, Portugal (I might not get to attend though, which is a shame).
- I'll be helping out with Recent Changes Camp San Francisco, May 9-11 2008. "The family reunion for the wiki ohana!"
- I also serve on the now-mostly-defunct m:Special Projects Committee, as of May 2006.
- Finally, I give general presentations about wikis and Wikipedia to various groups, particularly librarians. A handout I developed for librarians may be found here. I am happy to share slides, notes, and thoughts on what works & what doesn't.
- Attempting to organize more regular San Francisco-area meetups. We now have a mailing list -- see that page for details.
- I can often be found on IRC, where I go by brassratgirl; and can sometimes be found sending long-winded posts to various Wikipedia mailing lists. I almost always regret this in the morning.
[edit] Things I care about
- Foundation governance, transparency, and sustainability; integrating new contributors into governance smoothly; exploring what it really means to "lead with a community."
- Goodwill and fun with my fellow Wikipedians: hence, meetups and Wikimania :) Events are very important to the community as a whole, and I encourage everyone to go to and organize meetups.
- References and sources in articles. This is not about arguing whether crufty websites 'count' as sources; this is about making sure the 90% of totally verifiable content gets good references added, for the sake of the readers.
- Communicating about Wikipedia.
- Gender on the projects; the construction of outsiders versus insiders, and implications for creating knowledge.
- Free knowledge; parse this as you will.
The Real Life Barnstar | ||
For your dedication to Wikipedia meetups, and that Kat had given you the RL version -- User:WikiLeon |
[edit] Book
I am working on a book about Wikipedia, to be published in 2008. Find out more and contribute to it here: user:phoebe/book.
[edit] a long answer to a short question
Why work on Wikipedia? For me, the answer is a matter of scale. As a librarian, I am in the business of helping make sure that people get the information that they are looking for in order to do their jobs, educate themselves, satisfy their curiosity and live a fulfilling life. I am also in the business of helping people discover relevant information towards these ends that they don't realize or imagine exists. Wikipedia -- meaning the collection of people that produce this site -- is also working towards these goals, but on a global, multilingual and hitherto unprecedented scale. Because of the very heavy use the site receives, the changes that you or I make to Wikipedia are likely to touch substantially more lives than any other possible way of contributing to the information universe at this moment. It's a simple matter of efficiency -- I work on Wikipedia, and try to make it better, in order to reach as many people as possible.
There are other reasons as well why this is a deeply important project: the Wikimedia Foundation projects represent one of the most diverse global online communities around. The projects provide a way to get to know people from other parts of the world, and learn about their similarities and cultural differences, in a way that is unmatched online. The Foundation and Wikipedia also represent projects that are perhaps more comprehensively volunteer-driven and volunteer-governed than any other similar undertaking; the projects provide a model for what other empowered collaborative undertakings could look like and achieve. And finally, the sheer scope of Wikipedia is unparalleled in history. There's never been a reference work like this before -- never one both so general and so detailed, one that tries to be all things to all people in all languages. Wikipedia's existence is due to an accident of being in the right technological place at the right time, but it now affords a chance to work on one of the grandest undertakings ever.
Wikipedia is generally a friendly place, but it's also filled with arguments, disagreements, and actions that are angering or upsetting. For the most part people work out those differences through peaceful processes and resolution, with profound instances of assuming good faith; occasionally this doesn't seem possible. Generally, though, the Wikipedia communities are filled with some of the most extraordinary people I have ever had the pleasure to meet -- sometimes in person, sometimes not. I think most contributors who have spent very much time on Wikipedia realize what a cool project this is, and what cool people work on it -- but this doesn't get articulated enough to the world at large; it's easier to criticize a project than defend it well, and more importantly, to improve it. Wikipedia does of course have many areas in which to improve -- accuracy should be checked to a much higher standard, the rate of referencing is appalling, we can improve the climate for new and expert contributors alike. But I'm optimistic on all of these fronts, and hope to continue discovering beautiful and extraordinary evidences of human cooperation here.
[edit] Some Wikipedians that I have sat down and had a beer with
- See User:Phoebe/Drinking.
[edit] On usernames
|
I used to edit content under the name brassratgirl. I generally teach and present using my given name. That username is longstanding and has nothing whatsoever to do with MIT, or this. It is also not symbolic of anything in particular. If you're curious, ask and I'll send you the explanation. (I am also not user:BrassRat, or related to any other variation). wikihiero
[edit] how to use Wikipedia -- resources
These are a collection of handouts, (hopefully) useful for learning and teaching Wikipedia. Feel free to print them, distribute them, use them for presentations, change them, claim them, whatever you need to do.
- Getting started (pdf)
- How to evaluate an article (pdf)
- the (extensive) list of resources for librarians (and everybody else) new to Wikipedia
- Are you a professor teaching or a student in a class about Wikipedia? read this.
New: An amazing index
[edit] A referencing challenge
There are many useful and scholarly online sources of further reading and information that I feel should be systematically cited in appropriate articles. For example:
- the great bibliographies of basic mathematical books available from the "Basic library list" of the Mathematical Association of America
- How products are made, an encyclopedia from McGraw-Hill that is inexplicably free online (and very cool)
- Internet Public Library pathfinders are lovely guides to the web in a small topic area
- not to mention the Librarian's Index to the Internet, a peer-reviewed collection of sites on all topics
- The National Academies Press puts most of its books online; they are generally nicely reviewed treatises on policy and technical issues
- the National Science Digital Library has good resources also
- The LOC American Memory "on this day" project -- for the date articles
- Almost every topic has a book about it listed in worldcat
- Open CourseWare courses
- biographies of biologists from biologists
- tree of life pages with citations
- A giant list of field guides! guides for almost everything imaginable.
for those with access to printed or expensive resources:
- see here for a project to collect history of science biographical resources
more to come
[edit] wikimania
See:
[edit] research
[edit] contributions
Some of the things I'm interested in include: English literature, history, jewelry, science, (particularly oceanography, ecology, conservation and marine science) and library science. However, I also have interests in lots of other areas and I like to research things. Sometimes I just fix typos, or merge articles, or rewrite clunky phrasing. Things I'd like to see improved include core articles, applied science and technology articles (including engineering), and sourcing for nearly everything.
Referencing is my true love. I estimate I've added roughly a couple hundred references (so far) to print sources for articles I didn't originally write, mostly due to my Dictionary of Scientific Biography project.
A couple things to be proud of:
- Ocean sunfish -- one of the very first articles I started, now featured
- Elsie MacGill -- helped turn this into a good article
[edit] personal principles
[edit] common sense
From the past: or the use common sense department, or why it's good to remember not to make a big deal out of things.
On RFAs:
A question from the very first batch of archived RFAs, in 2003 (around the time I joined the project):
- Wow. I don't know. What are the responsibilities of being a sysop?
- As far as I know, there aren't really any responsibilities, just a list of obvious things not to do.
I'd encourage anyone new to the project who is thinking about being an adminstrator, or who is getting heavily involved, to read up on your history; many of these friendly people are still around today, though many others sadly aren't.
On policy:
“ |
If Wikipedia achieves its potential there will be thousands of people writing and editing articles. There is no system in place that would allow all of this activity to be monitored by some central authority to insure compliance with various editorial policies. With this in mind, we should not try now to lay down policies as if the project is easily controlled. We should assume that policies will emerge from use and experience. We should not try to anticipate what the lessons of experience will be. from Tim Shell, from here |
” |
If all policy discussion was conducted in verse, the world would be so much better.
On sourcing
I wrote a rant about why sourcing is important, and posted it on Foundation-L. You can join those (unfortunate?) readers here.
[edit] A short essay on taste
(nb: I wrote the following paragraph soon after joining wp, but it holds true today; though after a couple of years I don't mind holding my own in a debate, I still don't participate in many arguments.) Things I like doing on Wikipedia: browsing, wikifying, adding citations, verifying things like bibliographies and expanding articles about common yet complicated things, and having the sense of working on an encyclopedia in the grand tradition of same, albeit in a completely new fashion. I also like reading articles. Things I don't like at all: debates about controversial subjects, flame or edit wars.
[edit] Pet peeves
My biggest pet peeve: cite your sources, people! If you need help finding sources, there's the Reference Desk, the new Newspaper and magazine article request service, the fact and reference check people, or I will individually work with anyone who needs help finding or verifying sources. Just ask.
- When in doubt, be nice and see Wikipedia:Simplified_Ruleset.
[edit] keeps
A few of the unpopular things I have fought to keep over the years:
- WP:BJAODN : part of our history; community building; sometimes genuinely funny. In remembrance, have started my own small collection: User:Phoebe/fame.
- List of important publications in computer science : imperfect but actually useful.
- Library of Congress classification subpages : more browsing systems are good. Could go to wikisource as suggested by mako.
[edit] On mergers
Oppose. Bananas do not have nearly the nutirition and great flavor of plantains when cooked right. It would be an insult to plantains to combine the two. from Talk:Banana.
[edit] editing resources
User:Phoebe/Librarians -- here is a handout on the basics of using and editing Wikipedia, with lots of handy links, geared particularly towards librarians.
useful: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Redirect
editing help for mediawiki -- here is a bunch of stuff that I often forget how to do, because I have a hard time remembering syntax
upload images and that new-fangled image markup
line art drawings of fish [1] for use on marine/fishery/fish pages. Excellent line art drawings. done so far: sturgeon, flounder, mola mola..
Another Tip of the moment...
Want to help classify Wikipedia's biographical articles, but don't feel like editing an article just to see whether the Persondata is there or not? Add this to your monobook.css (or whatever skin you are using):
Read more: Wikipedia:Persondata
|
[edit] a project or two
shamelessly stolen from user:Ravedave
Reference: unreferenced/unsourced template should be used extremely liberally | as should Template:Not verified | Wikipedia:WikiProject Fact and Reference Check | Wikipedia:Newspapers and magazines request service
Librariana: Wikipedia:WikiProject Librarians | Library-stub articles | Wikipedia:Reference Desk
Research: Wikipedia:WikiProject Wikidemia | (see also: meta)
Fix it: Wikipedia:Cleanup resources | cleanup templates | articles to be merged (perhaps my favorite cleanup task | Wikipedia:Typo | the professor test | Engineering x fact-check articles | Electrical Eng x fact-check | Unreferenced BLPs courtesy of messedrocker
Make it great: Wikipedia 1.0 | Wikipedia:List of articles all languages should have | Template:Grading_scheme and Category:Wikipedia editorial validation (meta-discussion) | core biographies!
Meet: Wikipedia:Meetup (I'm still a Seattleite at heart) | Wikimania
This is a Wikipedia user page.
This is not an encyclopedia article. If you find this page on any site other than Wikipedia, you are viewing a mirror site. Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user to whom this page belongs may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia itself. The original page is located at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Phoebe. |