[Wikimedia Education] Fwd: [cultural-partners] GWU

Alex Stinson stinsoad at dukes.jmu.edu
Wed Apr 27 14:47:19 UTC 2011


I thought I would share what came up on the cultural-partners list recently
(if you are not a member and would be interested in joining, check out
http://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM/Contact).

Recently the George Washington University Library had one of their student
interns reference Wikipedia with their authoritative biographical
information from collections records (See below for some examples) and found
that they were very successful at increasing their web traffic to the
University library resource pages. Now I know that Education oriented
outreach is generally focused on bringing in students and their instructors,
but wouldn't work-shopping librarians to take advantage of their own
resources like we have been doing with GLAMs, and then using that built up
relationship to get access to their network of media literacy types be a
 useful approach for non-University members wishing to do outreach on
campuses? I think this might be a useful type of outreach event to make
Campus Ambassadors aware of, especially those not attached to Professors. As
I found last semester at JMU, the libraries always have a list of people who
are interested in new approaches to sharing their information.

I thought

Alex Stinson

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Sarah Stierch <sarah.stierch at gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Apr 26, 2011 at 7:11 PM
Subject: Re: [cultural-partners] GWU
To: Wikimedia Chapters cultural partners coordination <
cultural-partners at wikimedia.ch>


Hi everyone,

Here is the cut and paste email from Athena, the student I've been talking
to, and what work she's done, if you'd like to take a look!

--
1) Presidential Inaugural Medals:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presidential_Inaugural_Medals
*I actually wrote this one and provided the images

2) American Veterans Committee:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Veterans_Committee
*Added information from the collection, as well as linked the article to our
Finding Aid in a hope to encourage research.

3) Clifford K. Berryman: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clifford_K._Berryman
*Added some additional information to the article, did some re-arranging to
the format, and linked it to our Digital Collections.

4) William Staughton: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Staughton
*Wrote 95% of content, added image, and linked to our online collection and
Finding Aid.

5) Gargoyle Magazine: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gargoyle_Magazine
*Added some additional information and referenced our Finding Aid.  I spent
a good bit of time editing the article (it was in poor condition!) and
rearranging the information to make it flow better.

If you would like to see more examples, please let me know.  I just randomly
selected a wide variety of topics to illustrate our efforts.  If you would
like to take a closer look at our collections, please feel free to browse
our web site: http://www.gelman.gwu.edu/collections/SCRC/research-tools.  We
have large collections on George Washington University, as well as
Washingtonia.

Best,
Athena



-- 
Sarah Stierch Consulting
*Historical, cultural & artistic research & advising.*
------------------------------------------------------
http://www.sarahstierch.com/


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