This is an area I am interested in also. I run two groups of Mexican students who work
with Wiki project for their "servicio social," a community service requirement
for all Mexican undergrads. There was some question this semester as to whether the
program should continue as they were looking for evidence of "social impact"...
which they were defining as students having direct contact with beneficiares (think
reading to children or serving food at a soup kitchen). We did convince the powers-that-be
that while there may not be face-to-face, we can provide numbers as to how many people
access the materials that students create/improve (but cannot break it down as to how many
of those are from Mexico).
________________________________
From: Wiki-research-l <wiki-research-l-bounces(a)lists.wikimedia.org> on behalf of
Pine W <wiki.pine(a)gmail.com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2017 7:23:17 PM
To: Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Subject: Re: [Wiki-research-l] Request: Studies of external impacts of Wikipedia
I have a few thoughts.
Thinking financially here: while I'm not aware of studies, the rise of Wikipedia
coincided with the demise of Encarta. Also, I think that you'd want to take into
consideration the impacts that Wikipedia has had via its appearance in Google search
results and in Google's information summary panels; I'm sure that Google has
reaped substantial financial benefits from Wikipedia. (This is a mixed blessing.) You
might consider making an estimate of how many millions of dollars university and school
libraries have saved by not purchasing proprietary encyclopedias.
You might consult with WikiProject Medicine and WPMF to learn about the public health
impacts of their efforts in content development and translation efforts, which they seem
to think have been substantial in the developing world.
I believe that the education folks in WMF and WEF have done some analyses of how Wikipedia
assignments have may have yielded improved student engagement with material than
traditional course assignments.
There are probably also financial benefits that others have reaped from using open source
MediaWiki software. Perhaps the folks in WMF Tech would be able to provide some analysis
of the benefits of MediaWiki to external organizations.
HTH,
Pine
On Tue, Jan 24, 2017 at 2:19 PM, Aaron Halfaker
<ahalfaker@wikimedia.org<mailto:ahalfaker@wikimedia.org>> wrote:
Wikipedia has probably had some substantial external impacts. Are there any studies
quantifying them? Maybe increased scientific literacy? Or maybe GDP rises with access to
Wikipedia?
Are there any studies that have explored how Wikipedia has affected economic or social
issues?
I'm looking for any references you've got.
-Aaron
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