I have been editing the English Wikipedia since October 2006. I contribute mainly by adding redirects, fixing typos and grammar, and flagging articles that need improvement. Occasionally I'll set out to edit specifically, rather than editing as I read; fun but time-consuming!
Besides editing Wikipedia, I research it, in part through talking with and interviewing other Wikipedians. If you have any questions or do not feel comfortable, please feel free to ask via email, or for public discussions, on my Talk page.
My scholarly interests are in information, people, and technology. Specifically, I am interested in how people share and create knowledge, and how the technologies we use shape information and knowledge production. I am particularly interested in Internet-based and Internet-mediated communication -- both in shaping it with the Semantic Web and in understanding how scholarly communication, peer knowledge production, and social networks are already operating online. You can see more about what I'm working on my academic homepage. Recently I completed my Ph.D. from the Digital Enterprise Research Institute at the National University of Ireland, Galway; my dissertation used Wikipedia AfD discussions as a case study.
This is a Wikipediauser page. This is not an encyclopedia article or the talk page for 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 Be aware that the page may be outdated and that the user whom this page is about may have no personal affiliation with any site other than Wikipedia. The original page is located at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jodi.a.schneider.
Consider writing Free_Lance_Programmers based on ACM Europe Women's newsletter #1 Fall 2013, mentioning them in connection with Blechtley Park 2013 event.
Anolik, Ruth Bienstock, ed. Demons of the body and mind: essays on disability in gothic literature. McFarland, 2010.
Smith, Andrew. "Pathologising the Gothic." Gothic Studies 2 (2000): 292-305.
"Edgar Allan Poe figures the gothic as disability..." Garland-Thomson, Rosemarie. "Disability and Representation." PMLA (2005): 522-527.
Punter, David.『‘A foot is what fits the shoe’: Disability, the Gothic and Prosthesis.』Gothic Studies 2.1 (2000): 39-49.
“Demons of the Body and Mind: Essays on Disability in Gothic Literature,” -- especially Anolik, Ruth Bienstock. "Introduction: Diagnosing Demons: Creating and Disabling the Discourse of Difference in the Gothic Text." Demons of the Body and Mind: Essays on Disability in Gothic Literature: 1-20.
Hall, Cynthia.『“Colossal Vices” and “Terrible Deformities” in George Lippard’s Gothic Nightmare.』Demons of the Body and Mind: Essays on Disability in Gothic Literature (2010): 35.
"Archibald Craven as the gothic figure of disability" in Holmes, Martha Stoddard. "Crippling Colin: Disability in Two Film Versions of The Secret Garden." Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden: A Children's Classic at 100 6 (2011): 209.
"In a typical gothic tale, physical disability, such as the loss of an eye or a hunchback, produces feelings of horror and repulsion in the reader." Brown, Alan. "The Gothic Movement." Edgar Allan Poe in Context (2012): 241.
Use this article to identify LIS pioneers to cover: Williams, R. V., Whitmire, L., & Bradley, C. (1997). Bibliography of the history of information science in North America, 1900-1995. Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 48(4), 373-379. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1097-4571(199704)48:4%3C373::AID-ASI11%3E3.0.CO;2-
Robert V. Williams (?-January 14, 2017), Watson Davis award from the Association of Information Science and Technology, History of Information Science project, South Carolina info sci prof
Enough to source an article on Draft:Beryl Nelson? (Beryl Elaine Nelson, September 16, 1957 Buffalo - October 23, 2015 Mountain View)
http://research.google.com/pubs/BerylNelson.html "Beryl Nelson is an engineering manager in Search Infrastructure. Her early career was in languages, including two early Lisp implementations, and DEC Ada, where she was the "language lawyer". From 1995 on, she lived in Asia and Europe, returning to the US in 2014."
Investigate We Rule A7 deletion, via http://twitter.com/fuzheado/status/12412047177 ; are there relevant sources? Does A7 apply to software (not web content)? -- page is there, no indication of deletion or its reversion. A mystery!