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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Image gallery  





2 Info about the event  



2.1  Your 1,2,3,4,5 to get started!  





2.2  Schedule  







3 Editing  





4 Use the PrepBio tool  



4.1  Worklist - Ideas for Articles to Create and Improve  





4.2  Women Composers  





4.3  Women Instrument Makers  



4.3.1  Boalch-Mould Online Archive  







4.4  Other  



4.4.1  Instrument Making  





4.4.2  Organisations  





4.4.3  Useful Links  







4.5  More useful links  







5 Join WikiProject Women in Red  



5.1  Things to remember  anyone can edit BUT cite what you write!  







6 Some short video tutorials  





7 Images and videos  





8 After today  



8.1  Video guides to editing Wikipedia  
















Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh/Events and Workshops/World Music Day 2024







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

< Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh | Events and Workshops

Long Boi, a celebrity duck in York (now deceased) has a page on Wikipedia but 1,000s upon 1,000s of notable women still do not. We can change that. #WeCanEdit!

Image gallery[edit]

Info about the event[edit]

Did you know that most volunteer Wikipedia editors are male, and that there are fewer and less extensive articles on Wikipedia about women and issues important to women? There are thousands of notable women who meet Wikipedia’s standards for notability but don’t yet have a page.

Come and help us add more Women Composers and Instrument Makers to Wikipedia on Word Music Day 2024, in collaboration with St Cecilia's Hall museum!

Your 1,2,3,4,5 to get started![edit]

  1. Create your Wikipedia account
  2. Once you have created your account join the Wiki dashboard
  3. Have a look at the suggested worklist below of pages to create/improve below and decide who you want to work on. More redlinks can be found on WikiProject Women in Red's crowdsourced and Wikidata-driven Redlist index. Once you have decided who to work on Add your chosen page here.
  4. Little edits can make a big difference. Have a look at all the new pages created since Vote 100 in 2018 in the Women's Suffrage in Scotland timeline.

Schedule[edit]

Join us as we help make Wikipedia better!

Editing[edit]

Questions about editing? Read the Wiki-editing FAQ!

Use the PrepBio tool[edit]

Worklist - Ideas for Articles to Create and Improve[edit]

Cite what you write! 50–100 words or more written with a neutral point of view AND backed up with citations from reliable published secondary sources is enough to get a new article published. e.g. Example of minimum requirements Articles to create:

Women Composers[edit]

Women Instrument Makers[edit]

Boalch-Mould Online Archive[edit]

Other[edit]

Instrument Making[edit]

Organisations[edit]


Articles to improve:

Useful Links[edit]

More useful links[edit]

Here are some useful links to help you with your editing:

Here are some ways to keep track of your edits:


Join WikiProject Women in Red

Join WikiProject Women in Red by registering in the box at the top of the WIR page. You can then add a userbox to your user page.

Things to remember – anyone can edit BUT cite what you write![edit]

  1. Wikipedia is a tertiary source. Articles are backed up by facts from reliable, published secondary sources. Primary sources tend not to be used. A breadth & depth of quality sources helps demonstrates notability which is an important yardstick for articles staying on Wikipedia.
  2. Write with encyclopedic content in mind. Not academic essay. Strip back your writing to the facts.
  3. Write accessibly with a lay audience in mind. Any jargon needs explained the first time it is mentioned.
  4. Write with a neutral point of view. Split text up into sections with headings.
  5. Cite everything you write. Keep a note of urls (open access if possible), Journal articles DOI identifiers, Book ISBN numbers. Page numbers, volume numbers and book chapters should be included in your citation information too.
  6. Draft content in your sandbox draft space first. Wikipedia is a work in progress for sure but you can prepare articles or new sections for articles in peace in your personal draft space (the sandbox) and migrate it when ready.
  7. Write in your own words as much as possible. Even close paraphrasing counts as copyright violation. Short quotes can be included but need to be attributed.
  8. Links in the main body of the article should only be to other Wikipedia pages. You only need to add links when the term is first mentioned in the article. Linking every time is considered overlinking. Sites outside of Wikipedia should be linked in a separate section at the foot of the page with an External links heading. No more than 5–8 links to websites outside of Wikipedia – we are not a link farm!
  9. Images have to open-licensed to be allowed on Wikipedia. CC-0, Public domain, CC-BY, CC-BY-SA licensed images are allowed and are hosted on sister project, Wikimedia Commons. Open images can be searched for using search aggregator tools such as CC Search.
  10. Want to learn more? Go to our website, join/email Wikimedia UK


Some short video tutorials

  1. Exploring the main page of Wikipedia (4 mins)
  2. How to create an account on Wikipedia (1 min 30 secs)
  3. How to switch on the (easier to use) Visual Editor interface (1 min 20secs)
  4. How to create a user page and play around with formatting (4 mins)
  5. How to create an article on Wikipedia (7 mins)
  6. How to move your drafted article to the main article space on Wikipedia (2 mins)
  7. How to add bold, headings, links, italics to a Wikipedia page (3 mins)
  8. How to add citations and references to a Wikipedia page (3 mins)
  9. How to upload an image to Wikimedia Commons (Wikipedia’s sister project) - 4 mins
  10. How to insert an image from Wikimedia Commons onto a Wikipedia page (3 mins)
  11. How to edit existing pages on Wikipedia (4 mins)
  12. Some printable resources are here.

These are all embedded in our student-created Wikimedian in Residence website here to make the how & why of editing Wikipedia much easier to engage with. Undergraduate student Hannah Rothmann’s work creating this website and the video resources above in lockdown Summer 2020 won an Open Education Global award recently. Because we felt that students, educators and everyone should be able to do this much more simply and have this ‘need to know’ information readily and openly available so I hope this is of use to you.

Images and videos

Video of a seal at Newburgh beach, Aberdeenshire (my home town)
Newburgh beach
Newburgh beach

Wikipedia pages can feel a tad lifeless without an image or short video to help illustrate it. We can change that. We can edit!
Just have a look at the images and videos we have added to the University of Edinburgh library page by way of illustration!

Why not help document cultural heritage as part of the world's largest photo competition, Wiki Loves Monuments, where thousands of photos of listed buildings and monuments worldwide (interiors and exteriors) are uploaded for the benefit of the global open knowledge community every year




After today

Once you've learned the basics of editing using Wikipedia’s Visual Editor, I hope that you'll stay logged in and edit or create more articles. As a first step you may like to check out what What Wikipedia is not along with its 5 guiding principles: The 5 pillars. Some ways to keep track of your edits

  • Visual Editor user guide
  • Questions – a guide on where to ask questions
  • The Teahouse new editor help space
  • Wikipedia Help pages
  • The simplified ruleset – a summary of Wikipedia's most important rules
  • Is your topic notable enough for an article?
  • Be Bold!
  • Don't let grumpy users scare you off.
  • Learn from others
  • How to write a great article
  • A simplified manual of style
  • Video guides to editing Wikipedia[edit]

  • Navigating Wikipedia's front page
  • How to structure an article on Wikipedia: the Featured Article
  • Wikipedia editing in 30 mins
  • How to edit an existing article the right way
  • How easy is Wikipedia's Visual Editor? 5 min walkthrough
  • How to edit using with Visual Editor Part 1: Creating an Account
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor: Part 1.1 Adding Headings
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor: Part 1.2 Adding bold & italics
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor: Part 1.3 Adding bullet points
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor: Part 1.4 Adding links
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor: Part 2.1 Adding citations and references
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor: Part 2.2 Further practice with citations (DOI and Pubmed IDs)
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor:Part 2.3 Adding an image
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor: Part 2.4 Adding categories
  • Editing Wikipedia using Visual Editor: Part 3 Creating a new article in the Sandbox
  • Editing Wikipedia: Communicating with others using the Talk page and Help Desk
  • Moving a drafted article into Wikipedia's live space.
  • Create visually dynamic timelines in minutes with Histropedia
  • Use the 'Find Link' tool to add links BACK to your page from other pages that SHOULD link to your page.

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Wikipedia:University_of_Edinburgh/Events_and_Workshops/World_Music_Day_2024&oldid=1232554473"

    Categories: 
    Wikipedia edit-a-thons
    Wikipedia meetups in June 2024
     



    This page was last edited on 4 July 2024, at 09:53 (UTC).

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