Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh/75th month report

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Institution Resident's Name Period Covered Date of Report List of reports to date
University of Edinburgh Ewan McAndrew 1 March 2022 - 31 March 2022 (Seventy-fifth month of the residency) 31 March 2022 Click here to view all reports.

NB: The Higher Education Strike limited events and interactions this month

Running total of staff & student engagement[edit]

Institution Resident's Name Number of training sessions delivered Number of students trained Number of staff trained Members of the public trained Number of editathons Total articles created Total articles improved
University of Edinburgh Ewan McAndrew 299 1,604 570 632 126 1,186 5,638

Projects delivered[edit]

Strategic Aim 1 - Knowledge Equity[edit]

  • Develop partnerships that increase access to underrepresented cultural heritage
  • Support the development of minority and indigenous language Wikipedias
  • Encourage new and existing partners to help tackle the gender gap on Wikimedia
  • Identify other areas of inequality and bias and create partnerships to help address these
  • Engage with volunteers and partners across the UK, widening the charity’s geographic reach
  • Diversify content producers by recruiting new editors from under-represented communities
  • Support the development of a more inclusive culture across the Wikimedia projects
  • Ensure that Wikimedia UK’s own policies and practices support diversity and inclusion

Progress[edit]

Student Experience Grant[edit]

  • The University of Edinburgh Student Experience Grants project began on 28th March 2022 in collaboration with 3 student partners who will work for 13 more weeks to research and improve coverage of LGBT History, Gender History and Black History on Wikipedia from March to June 2022. As of 31 March 2022, the students are appointed for 1 day (0.2FTE) for the next 13 weeks. They have received initial Wikipedia training and attended the History of Art edit-a-thon on Monday 28th March 2022 at Edinburgh College of Art.

Two Summer internships to support the Map of Accused Witched project[edit]

Women in Red workshops[edit]

Dagny Holm Lego portrait. Did you know only 19% of biographies on Wikipedia are about women? To celebrate International Women’s Day, Stewart Cromar created a new article for Dagny Holm, the very first Master Builder in the Lego Group

One new Women in Red workshop was held on 25 March 2022.

  • 4 new articles were created at the 25 March 2022 event inc. Sunniva Skoglund (born 22 May 2002) who is a Norwegian football player from Porsgrunn who plays as a goalkeeper for Stabæk.
    • 11 more articles were edited.
    • 48 edits in total.
    • 3 editors.
    • 1.52K words added.
    • 7 references added.
  • New article written for International Women's Day by Stewart Cromar for his heroine Dagny Holm (18 May 1916 – 1 March 2004) who was the Lego Group’s chief model designer until 1986, when she retired at the age of 70.
  • New article on the Loch Lomond wanderer following archaeological research by University of Aberdeen and University of Edinburgh.

Women in Astronomy and Young British Artists[edit]

Activities delivered with stats:[edit]

Events[edit]

Event Name Date and duration Location Attendees New editors Trainers Gender breakdown
Women in Red editathon
Monthly Women in Red editathon - creating new biography articles of notable women on Wikipedia

List of usernames recorded
25 March 2022 University of Edinburgh, online webinar. 3 0 Ewan McAndrew 66.6% female

Partnership interactions[edit]

Image statistics - as of 1 April 2022[edit]

The most viewed images for March 2022 were from the English Wikipedia article on Odessa and features Odessa during the first days of Revolution in 1916. These images now have 431,980 pageviews on English Wikipedia for March 2022. Almost double last month's page views for the page.
UoE Centre for Research Collections images Total for March 2022 613,244 views
All images uploaded in collaboration between WMUK and the University of Edinburgh Total for March 2022 2,003,945 views
UoE Centre for Research Collections images Total for 75 months of monitoring 55,221,694 views

The most viewed images for March 2022 across all Wikipedias were:

Rank Wikipedia page Monthly views Link to image/video on Commons
1 Odessa 431,980 views Odessa during first days of Revolution - 1916.
2 Iceland 251,285 views Gerardi Mercatoris Atlas, sive, Cosmographicae Meditationes de Fabrica Mundi et Fabricati Figura (24696368309).jpg
3 Tableau périodique des éléments on French Wikipedia 141,048 views Periodic Table cupcakes at Ada Lovelace Day 2017
4 Sócrates on Spanish Wikipedia 128,056 views The Old Library, Trinity College - Dublin
5 Rabbit 97,947 views Set of wax models showing development of the rabbit heart, twentieth century (24226156252).jpg
6 Escherichia coli 66,892 views E.coli_image
7 Alexander McQueen 62,251 views Lee Alexander McQueen Headstone Back.png and Lee Alexander McQueen Headstone.png.
8 Iceland on German Wikipedia 59,243 views Gerardi Mercatoris Atlas, sive, Cosmographicae Meditationes de Fabrica Mundi et Fabricati Figura (24696368309).jpg
9 Noah's Ark 52,033 views Woodcut of Noah's Ark from Anton Koberger's "German Bible".jpg
10 Robert Louis Stevenson 49,845 views Robert_Louis_Stevenson_mit_7_Jahren

Strategic Aim 2 - Digital Literacy[edit]

Work with partners to develop digital, data and information literacy through Wikimedia

  • Support the education sector’s engagement with Wikimedia as a digital literacy tool
  • Facilitate Wikimedia-based digital, data and information literacy projects with other partners
  • Create content and resources for learners and educators
  • Advocate for the inclusion of Wikimedia in curriculum, syllabus and course development
  • Collaborate with the civil society sector and other partners to combat misinformation

Progress[edit]

Wikimedia in the Curriculum - current work[edit]

10th century medieval Islamic agate inkwell inscribed with Kufic script. Khalili Collection.
Large Ewer, Iran or Egypt 9th–11th century AD, held by the Khalili Collection of Islamic Art. This is the largest specimen known so far of a popular Islamic glass form – the pear-shaped ewer with almond-shaped mouth. The shape can be traced back to Sasanian glass ewers.
  • Five new case studies can now be added to the Wikimedia in Education - Booklet of Case Studies. Dr. Glaire Anderson, History of Art, and Evelyn Balsells PhD, Global Health Challenges Pg Online, have signed off on their case studies and images to be used. E. McAndrew has discussed with his line manager, Karen Howie, about involving the graphic designer, Nicky Greenhorn, to block off time to prepare these new case study additions with end of May 2022 earmarked for a completion date.
  • The Translation Studies MSc Wikipedia assignment for Semester Two has now commenced as of 10 February 2022 with the students due to publish their completed 2,500 word translations on a target Wikipedia by 20 May 2022. Plans are in place for the 2022/2023 assignment to begin in September 2022.
  • The assignment on Art in the Age of the Great Caliphs had been postponed owing to the Higher Education strike and concluded with an editathon on Monday 28th March 2022. New article created on 28 March on the visual culture of The Umayyads of Syria and images from the Khalili Collections added to pages where readers would encounter non Western art on reasonably generic pages such as inkwell, jug, earring, pitcher and bowl. Discussed with Dr. Glaire Anderson on the History of Art course programme about running an inter-year group and inter-disciplinary event later in the year in October 2022.

Projects[edit]

  • Editathon event planned with Professor Melissa Terras to improve topic coverage of Creative Informatics on Wikipedia at Edinburgh Napier's Merchiston campus on 25 April 2022. Professor Terras wrote her very first Wikipedia article, The Boy in the Train this month.
    Mary Campbell Smith, author of The Boy in the Train

Conferences[edit]

  • Abtract approved for the LILAC Information Literacy conference at Manchester Metropolitan University 11-13 April 2022 about our new 'Edinburgh Award - Digital Volunteering with Wikipedia', entitled: Wikipedia, Student Activism and the Ivory Tower.
  • Abstract submitted for the 14-16th June 2022 University of Edinburgh Learning and Teaching Conference - a joint presentation with Evelyn Balsells PhD about the Wikipedia assignment on the Global Health Challenges Pg Online course programme where students work in groups to improve neglected stub articles about natural and manmade disasters by 1,000 words over four weeks. Learning and contributing: Using global health concepts to improve the quality of Wikipedia pages on public health disasters.

Wikipedia Editing - Extension given for Edinburgh Award activity[edit]

  • The first iteration of the Digital Volunteering with Wikipedia - a new Edinburgh Award to accredit students for extended project work on Wikipedia commenced on 9 December 2021 and will now conclude on 25 May 2022 instead of 6 April 2022 owing to the disruption of Covid-19 and Higher Education strike. Currently, as of 31 March 2022, 10 students have progressed with the project, submitted their 400 word action plans and set up individual Wikipedia project pages and dashboard links to develop important information literacy, digital research, communication and collaborative skills ahead of the world of work and accredit them for undertaking 50-55 hours (or more) of Wikipedia work over an extended period. This first iteration of the award has been developed in collaboration with Kirsty Stewart and Gavin McCabe at the University of Edinburgh Career Service and in collaboration with our 2021 Wikimedia student interns, Erin Boyle and Clea Strathmann. The recording of Input Session 1 is available here and the resident has had individual 1-1 meetings with each of the 11 students undertaking this award and offered advice about how to curate worklists, how to look for gaps on Wikipedia, how to find reliable published sources, how to run an event, how to crowdsource and make use of the University hive mind, how to translate pages, and how to find and work with open images.

Activities with stats:[edit]

Events[edit]

Event Name Date and duration Location Attendees New editors Trainers Gender breakdown
Introduction to Wikidata workshop 9 March 2022 University of Edinburgh, online digital skills workshop event. 3 3 Ewan McAndrew 66.66% female
Introduction to Wikisource workshop 23 March 2022 University of Edinburgh, online digital skills workshop event. 4 4 Ewan McAndrew 75% female
History of Art UG course editathon
Art in the Age of the Caliphs 2022 editathon - adding new articles and images about Islamic art to Wikipedia

List of usernames recorded
28 March 2022 University of Edinburgh, hybrid editathon event. 13 11 Ewan McAndrew 100% female

Partnership interactions[edit]

None this month.

Strategic Aim 3 - Advocacy[edit]

Create changes in policy and practice that enable open knowledge to flourish

  • Support and enable individual organisations to adopt more open policies and practice
  • Promote and facilitate sector-level change towards open knowledge
  • Work with national and international partners to build the case for free knowledge
  • Advocate for open knowledge within the UK’s public policy and legislative arena
  • Contribute to international advocacy activities and programmes as appropriate

Progress[edit]

  • Was approached by journalist Libby Brooks at the Guardian newspaper] to provide background detail and any further developments on the Map of Accused Witches project following the First Minister of Scotland issuing a formal apology to women accused of being witches.
  • Recorded an interview with Katie Crampton at Wikimedia UK for Women's History Month about the work of the residency to support combating gender bias online and was joined by Student Experience Grant project participants: Sian Davies, Eleanor Capaldi and Kirsty Vass-Payne who will work for 14 weeks to improve topic coverage of LGBT History, Gender History and Black History.
  • TedX St. Andrews approached Ewan McAndrew and Emma Carroll to perform a talk on Saturday 9th April for TedX on the Interactive Map of Accused Witches Wikidata project.
  • Leah Emary and Lucy Hinnie at Wikimedia UK contacted E.McAndrew about providing students at QMUL with a certificate for completion of Wikimedia work.
  • Gordon Strachan at Brechin 2020 group contacted E.McAndrew. This is a committee that was set up to commemorate 800 years since the restoration of Brechin Cathedral. Part of the legacy was to build a withes cairn/monument for those accused of witchcraft in the Brechin and surrounding area.
  • Tomas Slater, former UoE History student and organiser of our Black History month Wikipedia event in 2017, contacted E.McAndrew about his current role at Terrence Higgins Trust and about potentially running editathons on LGBT history and improving topic coverage of HIV/AIDS.
  • Stacy Allison-Cassin at University of Toronto contacted E. McAndrew about how best to run an IFLA Indigenous Languages Session in Dublin later this year.
  • E.McAndrew was contacted by Natsumi Sakamoto, an artist based in Glasgow. She says she has been inspired a lot by the map of accused witches in Scotland a lot, and has been using the website for [previous art projects] in the last few years,

and often have introduced the research in her presentations. Currently, she is working on a new artwork to create 'ephemeral memorials' for witches in Scotland so wanted to enquire about some of the accused witches listed as resident in Glasgow.

Activities delivered with stats:[edit]

Events[edit]

The Higher Education strike limited events this month.

Partnership interactions[edit]

The Higher Education strike limited interactions this month.

Projects/events in development[edit]

  • Next phase of the Mapping the Scottish Reformation Wikidata project with Dr. Chris Langley (Newman University, Birmingham) and Professor Mikki Brock (Washington and Lee University, USA) - to be confirmed.
  • Translation Studies MSc Wikipedia assignment - new 2,500 project has commenced for Semester Two as of 10th February 2022 and yo conclude by 20th May 2022.
  • First iteration of a new Edinburgh Award for Wikipedia Editing to conclude on 25 May 2022 with 10 students currently undertaking it.
  • Updating the Booklet of Case Studies of Wikimedia in UK Education to relaunch a new digital edition. Content is currently with graphic designer Nicky Greenhorn with end of May 2022 pencilled in for completion.
  • Student Experience Grant awarded for three students to research and improve content on Wikipedia related to Gender History, LGBT History and Black History for 14 weeks from 28 March to end of June 2022. Students have begun work on the three subject areas as of 28 March 2022 and will be attending University of Edinburgh Archives on 4 May 2022.
  • Summer Internships are now advertised until 20 March 2022 with a view hiring two Wikimedia interns to support improving the Map of Accused Witches website for 12 weeks 1.0FTE this Summer. Interviews are earmarked for 14-19 April 2022.
  • Been invited to participate in the Witches of Scotland podcast.
  • Periodically supporting the Places of Worship in Scotland (POWiS) database being mapped into Wikidata.
  • Met with Sean McNamara at CILIP Scotland to develop a 30 minute presentation for their Information Literacy Group on 8 September 2022. Gavin Willshaw, Digital Engagement and Digitisation Manager at University of Edinburgh Library, and Dr. Sara Thomas, Wikimedia UK, attended the meeting and will co-create/present the session.
  • E. McAndrew discussing with Miranda Prynne about contributing an article to Times Higher Education's THE Campus, on Wikipedia supporting equality and diversity at the University.
  • E. McAndrew to investigate applying for a Royal Society of Chemistry outreach fund award.

Upcoming events in 2022[edit]

  • April 11-13 - Talk about the Edinburgh Award for Digital Volunteering with Wikipedia to be delivered at LILAC Information Literacy Conference 2022
  • April 14-19 - Interviews for the Scottish Witchcraft Data Visualisation internship and Open Source Web Development internship.
  • April 25 - Creative Informatics event at Edinburgh Napier University's Merchiston campus.
  • June - Student Experience Grant recipients complete their project work related to improving articles relating to Gender History, LGBT History and Black History (dates tbc.).
  • June 6 - Two Wikimedia Summer internships to improve the Map of Accused Witches website over 12 weeks this Summer.
  • June 14-16 - University of Edinburgh Learning and Teaching Conference - presentation with Evelyn Balsells PhD about the Wikipedia assignment on the Global Health Challenges Pg Online course programme.
  • September 8 - CILIP Scotland event for their Information Literacy Group. Remote presentation by Ewan McAndrew, Gavin Willshaw and Dr. Sara Thomas
  • September - Translation Studies Msc assignment for 2022/2023 commences.
  • October - History of Art event with Dr. Glaire Anderson (tbc.)
  • October - Ada Lovelace Day 2022.
  • October - Edinburgh Award for Digital Volunteering with Wikipedia commences for 2022/2023

Media[edit]

New blogposts, articles, reports[edit]

New videos and podcasts[edit]

Wikimedian in Residence - University of Edinburgh Media Hopper channel[edit]

1 March 2022 to 31 March 2022

Number of videos Impressions Minutes viewed Number of plays since 1 March 2022
387 1,000 893 219

The most played videos were:

Position Video Plays Total plays
1 Word Count tool - counting the prose text in a Wikipedia article 16 plays 584 plays
2 Moving a drafted article into Wikipedia's live space. 14 plays 1,712 plays
3 OpenRefine Beginners Tutorial: how to process and reconcile datasets by Emma Carroll 12 plays 230 plays
4 OpenRefine Beginners Tutorial 11 plays 563 plays
5 Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor:Part 2.3 Adding an image. 10 plays 536 plays

Wikimedian in Residence - YouTube channel[edit]

  • The Wikimedian in Residence channel on YouTube which has now received over 286,194 views in total of its 118 videos with 1,095 subscribers. These videos have been viewed in 168 countries around the world over the course of the channel's lifetime.
Number of videos Views this period Hours watched this period New subscribers Total subscribers Total views Total number of countries viewing the channel
118 10,039 339.6 +30 1,095 272,336 168

One of our additions to YouTube by student Hannah Rothmann has now been viewed over 50,100 times since it was added on 14 September 2020.

Image uploads to Wikimedia Commons[edit]

Emma Carroll, Wikidata Data Visualisation intern working on the Accused Witches project

Press about the residency[edit]

  1. Edinburgh University searches for 'Wikimedians' - Edinburgh Evening News, 8th October 2015.
  2. University of Edinburgh to employ ‘Wikimedian in Residence’ web editor - The Student Newspaper.org, October 13th 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 10th 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 - 2nd 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 13th June 2017.
  27. Congratulations to our Wikimedian of the Year - Wikimedia UK blog 1st 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 1st 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 September 30 2017.
  33. Ada Lovelace Day – Professor Elizabeth Slater - Lorna Campbell's blog on October 10 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. 2nd December 2017.
  47. Wikipedia Games / SPLOTPoint - Anne-Marie Scott blog, January 1st 2018.
  48. 2017 Highs, Lows and Losses - Lorna Campbell blog, January 3rd 2018
  49. Wikipedia at 17 – Facts matter. - January 16th 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. Article in the Scotsman: Women scientists being whitewashed from Wikipedia – Ewan McAndrew, Siobhan O’Connor, Dr Sara Thomas and Dr Alice White
  95. Women and Wikipedia….Open Learning and a hobby for life!
  96. Translation and Open Education – An Experiment using Wikipedia
  97. Wikipedia in Higher Education: How students are shaping the open web
  98. Diversifying Wikipedia for the Festival of Creative Learning 2019
  99. 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
  100. You can’t be what you can’t see: Creating new role models on Wikipedia to encourage the next generation of Immodest Women
  101. International Women’s Day 2019
  102. Recruiting a Witchfinder General
  103. Wikimedia at the LILAC Information Literacy Conference 2019
  104. Balance for Better – recognising notable Edinburgh women
  105. Balance for Better – Teaching Matters
  106. Wikimania 2019 - Digital Support Librarian Lauren Smith reports on her first-time attendance at Wikimania 2019 in Stockholm, Sweden.
  107. Scotland Loves Monuments 2019 - Get involved in Wiki Loves Monuments!
  108. Learning to become an online editor: the editathon as a learning environment by Allison Littlejohn, Nina Hood, Martin Rehm, Lou McGill, Bart Rienties and Melissa Highton.
  109. Wikipedia on Olive Schreiner, like it or what? by Professor Liz Stanley.
  110. Celebrating notable women of Edinburgh
  111. Wikimedia Women in Red internship
  112. Four page spread on the Map of Accused Witches Wikidata project in the May/June 2020 publication of History Scotland magazine.
  113. Shifting Gears and Finding Female Pioneers
  114. To the Future of Women in Red and Online Diversity
  115. My first week as a Wikimedia Training Intern - blogpost by Hannah Rothmann
  116. 4 weeks into my Wikimedia Internship by Hannah Rothmann on the residency blog.
  117. #WCCWiki Colloquium 2020 by Hannah Rothmann on the residency blog.
  118. Final reflections on my Wikimedia Training Internship by Hannah Rothmann on the residency blog.
  119. Scotland Loves Monuments 2020 on the residency blog.
  120. Wikipedia as Learning Technology: Teaching Knowledge Activism vs Passive Consumption by Hannah Rothmann, Wikimedia Training Intern, for the University of Edinburgh's Teaching Matters blog.
  121. Introducing Mapping the Scottish Reformation: Clerics, Manuscripts, and Open Data on the Wikimedia UK blog.
  122. Article on Mapping of Scotland's Accused Witches with Open Data project appeared in an article on the Heritage Fund UK website on 27 October 2020 in the run up to Halloween.
  123. Editing Wikipedia: Stars, robots and talismans Honours course by Glaire Anderson for the Wikimedia UK blog
  124. Happy Birthday Wikipedia - guest blog post by Classics undergraduate student, Hannah Rothmann, for Wikipedia's 20th birthday.
  125. Telling the history of HIV and AIDS activism in Scotland on Wikipedia - WiR blog
  126. Scotland, Slavery and Black History project - WiR blog
  127. Those who fought: Representing HIV/AIDS activism on Wikipedia - Blog by Lorna Campbell
  128. My first week as a Wikisourceror – Guest post by student intern, Erin Boyle
  129. Open Data and Knowledge Equity – my first week by student intern, Clea Strathmann
  130. Supporting Open Collections – Guest post by Wikisourceror intern, Erin Boyle
  131. Wikimedia and the Diversity of Languages online – Guest post by Clea Strathmann
  132. Chapter 13 in the new Wikipedia and Academic Libraries book on Changing the Way Stories Are Told: Engaging staff and students in improving Wikipedia content about women in Scotland.
  133. Chapter 18 in the new Wikipedia and Academic Libraries book on Wikisource as a tool for OCR transcription correction: the National Library of Scotland’s response to Covid-19 by University of Edinburgh's Digitisation and Digital Engagement Manager, Gavin Willshaw.
  134. Teaching Matters Podcast: Wikimedia and Academia
  135. Teaching Matters Podcast: Wikimedia and Language
  136. Teaching Matters Podcast: Improving science communication with… Wikipedia?
  137. Podcast: Wikipedia: Where are the women? (13 minutes)
  138. Calls for Scotland to pardon witch-hunt victims gather pace - Guardian newspaper