[Gendergap] Top 10 Reasons to Encourage More Women Participation in Wikipedia

Sue Gardner sgardner at wikimedia.org
Tue Feb 8 13:16:53 UTC 2011


Hey Sandy,

I can't remember if I officially emoted joy yet that you joined this list! I
was thrilled to see you here: I meant to say that earlier but I think I
didn't. So, yay, and welcome back :-)

And thank you for this list: it's really great :-)
Sue

Sent from my phone: please forgive any typos or terseness. Please also
forgive top-posting; I can't do in-line replies from my phone.
On Feb 8, 2011 8:13 AM, "Sandra ordonez" <sandratordonez at gmail.com> wrote:
> Now that I've vented, I've been thinking of Delphine's original
question(s)
> regarding the why...this is what i came up with. *
>
> 1) Improve the quality of information.* Information is shaped by
> perspective, regardless of how NPOV you aim to be, and perspective is
shaped
> by experience. When you experience the world in a certain perspective, you
> see things that others don't see. A Chinese immigrant in the United States
> may notice things that a American born may not see, just like it is very
> likely that a female may notice things their male counterparts don't see.
> *
> 2) Open doors to more groups*.The inclusion of women might have a domino
> affect, and open doors for other groups, particularly those that are
> traditionally dis-empowered, such as people of color in the United States.
> (You can include whatever other group you want here..I can only speak to
the
> US).
> *
> 3) Improved processes and systems.* Collaboration is improved by diversity
-
> everyone in this group knows this. More female participation may result in
> better collaborative brainstorming and problem solvin.
>
> *4) Better organization.* Studies reveal that women tend to be great
> multi-taskers. IMHO, women are great multitaskers because they also plan
> their world to be more "efficient" for multitasking. I can totally see a
> group of women helping improve the organization of Wikipedia's rules,
> background knowledge, presentation, etc.
>
> *5) Stronger community. *Reports are also showing that more women than men
> are on social media. This is because women tend to focus on creating
> community. A larger, more sophisticated Wikipedian community is so
powerful,
> I'm not even sure how to describe its potential in words. However, it
would
> have the ability to help the projects but bring change worldwide.
>
> *
> 6) Better image. *Organizations that are ethical are usually favored and
> respected by society, which increase's an org's success. I am not talking
> "left vs right," and this is not a philosophical question, it is a public
> relations one. Talk to any PR practioner and they can share why this
works,
> and examples of organizations taking this PR strategy. And, at a minimum,
I
> can guarantee it will increase how many women worldwide see the project,
> which btw are 50% of the world's population.
>
> *7) Better parties and possibly more Wikilove!* As corny as it sounds, I
am
> quite positive that more women will improve the festivities in any wiki
get
> together, and possibly result in more wikilove :) lolol Why not!! What a
> perfect place to meet someone that shares your interest, and better
parties
> are usually always welcomed.
>
> *8) A better world society.* Wikipedia has this ability to affect the
world
> and start revolutions in what seems to be very silent but effective ways.
I
> really believe that the inclusion of women will have amazing revolutionary
> affects on the world, and make it better. Channeling Jeff Bridges,
> "information is really power, man." And maybe we have come to take for
> granted that the world is informed/educated through wikipedia on a daily
> basis. This has an effect.
>
> *9) Its the right thing to do.* Wikipedia has always gone against the
grain,
> even though at times it ruffled society's feathers b/c transparency in
> knowledge sharing is more important than the agenda of any group. Its part
> of the free culture movement, dedicated to empowering people worldwide,
and
> has done much in that area. Why wouldn't it come together now to improve
on
> this systematic problem that affects not only the project, but humans at
> large.
> *
> 10) Who else is going to do it? *No one has the ability to look and tackle
> this complex issue like Wikipedian community. No other community has the
> strength in numbers, intellect, and structure to address an issue like
this.
> I guarantee that other groups will embrace any solutions the community
> finds, b/c its not Wikipedia is not only a pioneer, but its a
> "best-in-breed" virtual project that comes up with "best-in-breed"
> solutions.
>
>
>
> --
> Sandra Ordonez
> Web Astronaut
>
> "Helping you rock out in the virtual world."
>
> *www.collaborativenation.com*
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