Wikipedia:WikiProject Librarians
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
We librarians flatter ourselves that we know a thing or two about organizing information. It's time we stepped up and contributed to Wikipedia: not just to its content but to its structures and technologies. This project page is intended to provide a rallying point for these activities. --Helperzoom 06:20, 16 May 2005 (UTC)
Contents |
[edit] Goals
- Coordinate maintenance of library-related content
- Develop and discuss proposals for improvements to Wikipedia based on library experience
- Assist at the Wikipedia Reference Desk
- Assist with categorization
- See also the similar but much more developed project page on the German Wikipedia.
[edit] Current tasks
[edit] Writing New Articles
Develop articles on List of basic library and information science topics. See also content at LISWiki
[edit] Article Improvement Collaboration
- Add articles here!
See Category:Library_and_information_science and its subcategories, as well as Category:Library and information science stubs, for other articles to improve. Post them here if you will need help from others.
[edit] ISBN linking
- ISBN linking. What should a typical ISBN page look like? (e.g. ISBN 0-12-345678-9). The current page knows about xISBN (see the bottom of the page), but doesn't know what to do with it. Should use of xISBN be expanded?
- Some options:
- convert each ISBN from xISBN into a link - easy to do, but could produce lots and lots of links to check
- convert list of ISBNs from xISBN into a combined query to RedLightGreen etc. - have to work out the syntax for this, might fail for large sets (maybe just do the top 10? they are sorted in order of frequency in WorldCat, so the top few are the most common)
- and what about LibraryThing links, using its <a href="http://www.librarything.com/thingology/2006/06/introducing-thingisbn_14.php">ThingISBN API</a>? --User:Paullisa
- Also: how about making the standard ISBN link produce a latent OpenURL like this: <a name='isbn=0-120345678-9' rel='alternate' title='OpenURL'>? Users with suitable browser plugins could then bypass the Wikipedia ISBN page and be directed to their home library's link resolver. --Helperzoom 17:23, 26 May 2005 (UTC).
- Note that work is still being done on a spec for latent OpenURL.--openly
- Will there be any problems with Wikipedia ISBN linking when ISBNs are expanded to 13 digits?
- See my entry called ISBN_linking on Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Librarians for a couple of further ideas on this topic. EdJohnston 02:24, 10 November 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Portal
Design and maintain a Portal for Library and information science or Finding information (the latter title might encourage more non-librarians to use and contribute). There are already Library Science Portals in the German [1] and French [2] Wikipedias -- can we get together to start and maintain one in English?
- See test page here.Her Pegship 23:28, 5 October 2006 (UTC)
- Update: the portal is functional but needs more input. Cheers, Pegship 19:10, 26 October 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Introduction to Wikipedia Culture for Librarians
Under construction at /Introduction
[edit] Introduction to librarians for Wikipedians
Some Wikipedians who have identified themselves as librarians on Wikipedia have generously volunteered their practical expertise in the management and maintenance of information on Wikipedia. These tasks have included activities such as:
- Annotating articles with verifiable references
- Indexing of authoritative sources for articles
- Verifying the factuality of cited sources
- Creating navigational aids (such as links) for retrieval of encyclopedic information
- Organizing
- Managing
- Classifying
- Disseminating
We need a coherent statement of what we think we have to offer, based on what we do as librarians.
[edit] Fact checking and adding sources
- There is a huge backlog of articles to be referenced and fact-checked -- see the Fact and reference check project.
- Other possibilities include adding links to library special or digital collections from the appropriate articles. See Tacoma Narrows Bridge for an example page doing this and Using Wikipedia to Extend Digital Collections for a presentation about it.
[edit] Members
Please sign up here and introduce yourself.
- Michael Sauers - Librarian, Trainer, Writer. a.k.a. The Travelin' Librarian. I'm currently the Internet Trainer for The Bibliographical Center for Research (BCR) in Aurora, CO. I'm the author of six books on libraries and Internet technologies and many articles on similar topics. Before signing up here I've done siginificant work on the Dean R. Koontz page.
- Helperzoom - digital librarian (my blog). So far all I've done is tinker; expanded the Z39.50 article; drafting article on OpenURL. --Helperzoom 06:20, 16 May 2005 (UTC)
- Lukethelibrarian - tech services librarian by day (some background) and virtual reference librarian after hours (VR blog to which I contribute). I've not contributed to Wikipedia before but have talked a lot about it elsewhere -- when I saw Peter's call to action I decided it was time to put my money where my mouth is. --Lukethelibrarian 14:54, 16 May 2005 (UTC)
- Sfrancoeur - info services librarian and (librarian blogger). Just added note about digital reference services entry that needs to be rewritten.
- PomeRantz - Faculty in the School of Information and Library Science UNC-Chapel Hill. (my blog; my professional site) I've been advocating for librarians to take some responsibility for Wikipedia for a while, so I too want to put my money where my mouth is. 10:17, 17 May 2005 (UTC)
- Neschek - I'm a final semester library school student and am moving to Ohio for a librarian job within the month. I got the job in Ohio in part because of a well-received talk I made last year on Wikipedia and wikis in general. I make a lot of minor edits to articles but have only started one non-library related article. -- — I. Neschek | talk 15:01, 18 May 2005 (UTC)
- RAHarris - Asst. Dir. for Academic Technology, William Paterson University, Wayne NJ (ten years) and beginning this Fall a student the MLIS program at SCILS, Rutgers, specializing in digital libraries. See (my library school blog) and my (personal bookmarks re: digital libraries) 16:06, 18 May 2005 (UTC)
- Bill Drew - Systems Librarian at SUNY Morrisville College Library, Morrisville, NY (20 years). I want to keep up with the newest technologies and thislooks like the place to do that. See my blog (BabyBoomerLibrarian).
- GUllman - Reference librarian at a U.S. public library. I've been contributing to Wikipedia since its second year, and have created such (hopefully useful) articles and projects as Library reference desk, List of books, Lists of articles by category, Wikipedia:Library and Information Science basic topics, and Wikipedia:WikiProject Books. Biggest pet peeve: enthusiastic contributors in other fields are cranking out lots of featured articles, but librarians are not writing about library science and research methodology. It becomes a circular argument that most librarians don't regard Wikipedia very highly and join us when they see the quality of articles in their own field.
- Omassey - Rare books cataloguer in London, UK. Tinkerer and tidier by nature. Omassey 12:23, 2005 May 19 (UTC)
- Chapman - Metadata librarian for a research library. Nothing completed yet.-- 16:21, 20 May 2005 (UTC)
- Neutralitytalk - volunteer at a public library. Reshelves books according to the Dewey Decimal System, mostly.
- Brassratgirl -- Phoebe Ayers; currently a reference librarian in a large academic sciences library. I've been kicking around here since 2003 and will gladly help try to explain either Wikipedia or the library research process :) I give occasional talks about WP to library groups; and work on Wikipedia research and Wikimedia Foundation issues.
- Fiona Bradley -- Academic librarian.
- Jenny Blower -- Trainee librarian (I will finish my degree soon..) who loves to tinker about and fix spelling mistakes, add missing graphics, add ISBNs and add appropriate categories. Hoping to expand Category:Children's books.
- Elizabeth McKenty aka lislemck -- Public librarian for 10 years. Previously a proofreader, factchecker, advertising copywriter, beauty magazine editor, um, cataloguer, bibliographer (3 books), and trainer. I am missing some, but I love to pull things apart, critique, edit. I have been called a perfectionist more than once. I have edited Wikipedia articles in the past, but not lately. Will see what I can do here. Visit my blog (Biblioblatherblog). Recently blogged for LITA at ALA annual (LITA Blog}
- Joshua Lambert -- Academic librarian and contributor to Wikipedia and Wikibooks since early 2004. Not a lot of Wikipedia contributions lately but monitor many articles. Liblamb 18:59, 21 July 2005 (UTC)
- Sue Maberry - Director of Library and Assistant to the Provost for Instructional Technology, Otis College of Art and Design. In preparation for teaching last month, I was researching Wikipedia and I became fascinated. I'm starting to create articles in one of my areas of interest, women in the arts.--Sue Maberry 18:31, 16 July 2006 (UTC)
- John Hubbard -- Librarian and contributor. Operator of Library Link of the Day and author at LISNews.com. I'm also an editor at the ODP and am playing with LISWiki. --John Hubbard 13:00, July 28, 2005 (UTC)
- FeanorStar7 -- Cataloger at the Library of Congress in Washington, DC; I have edited several hundred articles on Wikipedia, of all kinds, chiefly biographical. I think Wikipedia is a great resource. Librarians can only make it better!
- Jenelle Cleary -- Librarian - Parliamentary Library, Victoria, Australia. Love cleaning up wiki-mess and making things pretty. You can find out more at (Jenelle.net)
- Her Pegship -- Librarian at a Northern California private school; previously I worked for other public libraries in the Central Valley and Sacramento areas. I'm big on wikitidying as well, and my pet projects are films based on books and stuff on The Da Vinci Code, about which I'm co-teaching a workshop in April. Cheers, Her Pegship 06:06, 12 February 2006 (UTC)
- Wootking I am a librarian on weekends at my local library, but mostly, I am a failed writer, and have written several books, all of which have been rejected Tom 16:24, 20 May 2006 (UTC)
- Rory Litwin -- I am a librarian at the University of Minnesota, Duluth, and an ALA Councilor. I am responsible for Library Juice, the blog and former web-zine, and starting a book publishing company, Library Juice Press. I am a former Coordinator of the ALA Social Responsibilities Round Table and a current member of the Coordinating Committee of the Progressive Librarians Guild, as well as being a member of the Progressive Librarian editorial board. I like Michael Gorman. Rlitwin 00:41, 14 June 2006 (UTC)
- Neal Starkey ( Nowimnthing) Reference Librarian at a mid sized U.S. public library. Semi-frequent poster at Library Underground, been playing with various wiki's since 2005. Nowimnthing 13:46, 19 June 2006 (UTC)
- Andrea, a.k.a. Little Otik -- I just got my MSLIS from Pratt, where I tried to promote Wikipedia to librarians and library students as much as possible.
- David Bigwood Dbigwood -- cataloger at the Lunar and Planetary Institute (LPI) and responsible for Catalogablog. Member of the SLA Committee on Cataloging.
- Kristen -- Academic librarian. Have not contributed much to Wikipedia but would like to do more.
- [User:DGG] Academic Librrarian--about twenty years at a major private university, as chemistry librarian, biological sciences selector, and Research librarian. I have a doctorate from Berkeley in molecular biology, and then a MLS from Rutgers. I've been teaching at a library school full time for the last 4 years, giving the courses in research methods, science librarianship, electronic resources, & computer searching. My main concern is scientific publishing, both as public policy and bibliometrics. I respect the experts in other fields -- & even those in my own field :) listed here, and if my edits doesn't match what you think, let me know and we'll find a way. I apologize for not giving my name, but I'm also working on a somewhat different subject in WP where there's an established clique.
[edit] Supporters of Librarians who contribute to Wikipedia
- Ta bu shi da yu 03:59, 19 May 2005 (UTC)
- Jmabel | Talk 01:47, May 20, 2005 (UTC)
- —thames 18:18, 23 May 2005 (UTC)
- Chris 73 Talk 19:40, May 23, 2005 (UTC)
- — Catherine\talk 01:09, 24 May 2005 (UTC)
- MarkSweep 06:32, 24 May 2005 (UTC)
- Apwoolrich 19.28, 24 March, 2005 (UTC)
- DanKeshet 02:35, May 26, 2005 (UTC)
- sounds like an interesting and good project JesseW 04:19, 15 Jun 2005 (UTC)
- --Alterego 21:51, Jun 25, 2005 (UTC)
- (Mtindia 23:29, 5 February 2006 (UTC)); This section is a place where I easily visualize the credibility of the members. This, contrasts, directly with invisible colleagues in other sections of Wiki (who wish to remain anonymous). Members in this section must be congratulated for their authority as they continue to contribute to the area of middleware and facilitate building better methods of knowledge organization. I, as a librarian, like to call this process as information visualization.
- Tennessee Wood
- Jacqui★ 14:07, 20 July 2006 (UTC)
- Back in college, I had a work-study job as a library assistant and I know how difficult it can be. Knowing how difficult wikipedia is, I salute and will do what I can to assist them in their efforts here. Badbilltucker 13:30, 6 September 2006 (UTC)