GCPEDIA

GCPEDIA is an internal wiki used by the Government of Canada, for collaboration and knowledge sharing. Its slogan is “People & Knowledge“. GCPEDIA is only accessible via the Government of Canada network and contributors must be on a computer on a government (.gc.ca) network to be able to access it. This user base is potentially 250,000 people, from over 150 departments and agencies. Users must be registered if they wish to add or modify content, so that all contributions are attributable.

GCPEDIA has been used as a platform to take, publish, and distribute meeting minutes, to create project status dashboards, to collaboratively author interdepartmental papers, to brainstorm, and to create wiki-based briefing books.

Contents

Launch

GCPEDIA is an initiative of the Chief Information Officer Branch, Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat, with support from members of the GCPEDIA Web 2.0 Steering Committee and participants throughout the federal government.

GCPEDIA was formally launched as a government-wide pilot by Ken Cochrane, former Chief Information Officer for Canada, at the annual Government Technology Exhibition and Conference (GTEC) in Ottawa, Canada on October 28, 2008.[1][2]

Infrastructure

GCPEDIA runs on MediaWiki software.[3] It is hosted on the Public Works and Government Services Canada (PWGSC) Mid-Range Application Hosting Service.

Adoption within the Government of Canada

"According to the August 2009 content review, government of Canada public servants were using GCPEDIA primarily to share information and gather project/performance feedback; and build collaborative and interdepartmental communities of practice; establish terms of reference for interdepartmental committees; and as support networks across a wide range of topics"[4]

Canada's CIO, Corinne Charette, said in October 2009 of the success of GCPEDIA: "Clearly this is a community that is ripe for collaboration".[5]

In March 2010, the most senior Canadian public servant, the Clerk of the Privy Council, Wayne Wouters, officially joined GCPEDIA with both a personal user page and a page inviting ideas and feedback from government employees.[6]

In April 2010 Wouters stated that deputy heads within the Government of Canada must advance Public Service Renewal in their departments by various means including public servants "experimenting with Web 2.0 technology, including GCPEDIA".[7]

In a September 2010 article, Marj Akerley is quoted as stating "As government employees become more comfortable with new technology and seek mechanisms for collaboration, their confidence in the effectiveness of the tools is increasing".[8]

"The federal public service utilizes GCPedia...to facilitate collaboration and the sharing of information." - Maclean's magazine, September 16, 2010[9]

GCPEDIA is "a key medium for our staff in the regions to learn what's available, what's happening, in the National Capital Region and other regions," and it has helped tear down bureaucratic barriers between departments. - quote from Corinne Charette, CIO of Canada - Ottawa Citizen October 6, 2010[10][11]

"GCPEDIA has demonstrated that public servants have an interest in sharing information and collecting feedback on their projects."[12]

Snapshot of Usage, November 2011

See also

References

External links