Date: Tuesday, October 11, 2016, 10:00am to 3:00pm CST
Venue: Helmerich Collaborative Learning Center Classroom (LL123) on the Lower Level of the Bizzell Memorial Library @ the University of Oklahoma, 401 West Brooks St., Norman, OK, USA.
Cost: Free
Twitter hashtag: #Wikiwomen #OUOpenEd
Participants: The event is open to anyone who wishes to help preserve women’s history! No Wiki editing experience necessary; as needed, tutorials will be provided for Wikipedia newcomers. Female editors are particularly encouraged to attend. Can’t be there the whole time? No problem. Join us for as little or as long as you like. The first hour will be focused on introducing newbies to Wikipedia tenets and markup language.
Details: We will have access to computers, but attendees are welcome to bring their own laptops and power cords if they prefer.
Registration:To register, please sign in via either of these channels: a) Add your name to the guest list below; or b) send an email to johnstewart@ou.edu
If you cannot make it to the History of Science Collections in person but would still like to participate, you are more than welcome to do so remotely. Suggested articles appear below, or you may add or contribute to one of your choosing. So that we can count you as having participated, please add your contributions under the #Results section below. Note: There will not be a webinar aspect for online participants; simply log in and log your contributions below to have them "counted." And be sure to use the Twitter hashtag #WikiWomen and/or #OUOpenEd if you tweet about the event!
The following is a sampling of suggested articles to create or add upon. However, feel free to come up with your own ideas! In addition to the suggestions below, editors may consider cleaning up articles on more well-known women STEMmers, such as Rosalind Franklin, Marie Curie, Jane Goodall, Grace Hopper, Elizabeth Blackwell, Emmy Noether or Ada Lovelace herself. Helpful updates could be as simple as: Making sure reference links are still appropriate and functional; Adding new inline citations/references; Adding a photo; Adding an infobox; Adding data to more fields in an existing infobox; Creating headings; Adding categories; etc. Editors may also choose to focus on women in archaeology, paleontology, and geology as part of Earth Science Week and International Archaeology Day.
The WikiProject on Women Scientists includes lists of requested articles and a table of current articles by Wikipedia rating. This is a great place to see what's out there and what needs work.
scientist couples - this would be neat topic to cover, especially in terms of the prevalent antinepotism rules (and other discrimination) of the mid-20th century that kept a lot of women scientists in roles like research associate because their husbands were professors. There's relevant material in Rossiter's 1945-1970 volume, as well as Creative Couples in the Sciences and plenty of less rigorous sources.
This section is currently under construction. Any suggestions for women from the history of science or women currently involved in science, either in Oklahoma or the World more broadly, are appreciated.
Dorrit Hoffleit (astronomer) - infobox added; needs photo and expansion of text
Hildegarde Howard (paleornithologist) Infobox added, citations formated; needs photo; could use more detail. Edit 10/15: detail and biographical subhead added; needs photo.
Monica Turner (ecologist) Could use overall formatting updates (e.g., more line spaces to create shorter paragraphs); Infobox could use more detail edited to be more concise- Taylor Smith