[Gendergap] Fwd: [wmau:members] Grant to improve the lift of women in the ACT

Laura Hale laura at fanhistory.com
Sun Oct 2 02:53:04 UTC 2011


Forwarding this along in relation to the original post I made in terms of
ideas and if anyone is interested in working on this or has other ideas. :)

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Laura Hale <laura at fanhistory.com>
Date: Sun, Oct 2, 2011 at 1:28 PM
Subject: Re: [wmau:members] Grant to improve the lift of women in the ACT
To: "Ms. Anne Frazer"  members at wikimedia.org.au
Cc: Leigh Blackall <leighblackall at gmail.com>




On Sun, Oct 2, 2011 at 12:44 PM, Ms. Anne Frazer wrote:

> **
> This is good news. And of course this is an excellent opportunity to avail
> ourselves of funding that is on offer to promote female participation - as
> an unshackled open approach to sharing knowledge. We shouldn't need to
> incarcerate women's thinking into any one particular pathway or content.
> That the grants emanate from ACT is indeed a good opportunity to advantage
> our northern sisters and brothers. Your idea needs a commitment from a group
> of women and men reading this (or who know someone who might like to help)
> and to begin by coordinating it through one volunteer who would like to get
> this up and running.
> Anne
>
>
I was trying to think of things that could be done to generally meet this
grant and work with existing goals.  My initial thought was some scanning
related project related to women's rights in Australia and possibly working
with the National Library and contacts there to do that.  I just don't know
if that could be argued as a way to help improve the lives of local women.

My next thought was we could try to work with an international student
department at either the University of Canberra, Australian National
University, CIT or ADFA to develop a textbook aimed at female international
and aboriginal students who move to the territory to attend university.  The
purpose of the textbook would be to provide a female specific guide for
issues upon arrival, things like visas, getting care specific to being
female, how to be safe in the city, how to socialise, customs that may be
different than other countries,  The book could possibly be developed in
multiple languages, by trying to find bilingual female students who could
write a version for their native language.

This could be done on something like wikibooks.
http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Auxiliares_de_Conversación,_Language_and_Culture_Assistants_in_Spain_Survival_Guideappears
to be some what similar in terms of scope.  Ask for something like
$3,000 to $5,000 with $1,000 for printing costs, $2,000 for staff training
and incentives to contribute to the development of the book, $2,000 for
recruiting local female international students to contribute and incentivise
them to contribute.

If something like that could be done successfully, then it could be done a
as a model for other universities around Australia.  It would also help with
some of goals as they pertain to LangCom with developing materials in other
languages.

It just isn't something I would be peachy keen to do on my own.



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