English subtitles for clip: File:Royal Society - The GLAM-Wiki Revolution.webm
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1 00:00:11,530 --> 00:00:20,040 The Royal Society sees itself as having the lead in the presentation of science to the 2 00:00:20,040 --> 00:00:26,840 general public, and that’s a big concern. So it’s very interested in the popularisation of science. 3 00:00:26,840 --> 00:00:31,239 It has lectures, some of which are very popular. It has book prizes for popular 4 00:00:31,240 --> 00:00:34,840 books about science, and it sees Wikipedia in that context. 5 00:00:34,840 --> 00:00:41,340 It also does a lot on social media and so forth. So Wikipedia fits very well into that. 6 00:00:41,340 --> 00:00:47,809 The project involved several public events, mostly training workshops, where we had a 7 00:00:47,809 --> 00:00:54,029 lot of helpers from the existing community, that was great. It was harder to involve the 8 00:00:54,029 --> 00:00:59,679 wider scientific editing community, but we did manage that in some cases. 9 00:00:59,679 --> 00:01:05,479 The Ada Lovelace day in October 2013 was before I actually started at the Royal Society, but 10 00:01:05,479 --> 00:01:13,199 I came along and helped. It was a very successful training editathon, concentrating on biographies 11 00:01:13,229 --> 00:01:19,100 of women scientists, which is a real issue in the scientific sector. We’ve had a number 12 00:01:19,100 --> 00:01:24,780 of events - I did another one for International Women’s Day while I was working. 13 00:01:24,780 --> 00:01:29,820 We’re very lucky that both the women’s events, the Ada Lovelace Day and the International 14 00:01:29,820 --> 00:01:35,760 Women’s Day were addressed by female fellows of the Royal Society who’d come in especially 15 00:01:35,770 --> 00:01:44,219 which was tremendous. Ada Frith FRS actually trained in the Ada Lovelace Day and produced 16 00:01:44,219 --> 00:01:50,180 two articles, which is great, and they were really good days, both of them. 17 00:01:50,180 --> 00:01:58,280 It’s actually harder to do on other subjects but women in science is a topic that’s very 18 00:01:58,280 --> 00:02:02,729 easy to recruit for, and you get excellent results. Another thing I’m pleased about 19 00:02:02,729 --> 00:02:11,540 is I’ve got access to the nine or so scientific journals the Royal Society publishes for Wikipedians 20 00:02:11,540 --> 00:02:16,970 for a year on a trial basis, which I hope will go on afterwards. This will I think improve 21 00:02:16,970 --> 00:02:19,959 referencing on quite a lot of articles which is great. 22 00:02:19,959 --> 00:02:27,239 The Royal Society is really keen to continue collaborating with Wikipedia, which is great 23 00:02:27,250 --> 00:02:32,280 because not all Wikipedian in Residence projects have had that result. Some of them have sort 24 00:02:32,280 --> 00:02:38,260 of been one thing, and when it was done, the institution moved on to something else. 25 00:02:38,260 --> 00:02:44,600 The Royal Society had already been working with Wikipedia for about two years before I became 26 00:02:44,610 --> 00:02:50,670 involved, and they’re very keen to go on. We’ve learned a lot of lessons about what 27 00:02:50,670 --> 00:02:57,820 to do and what not to do, so I’m confident that programme will keep going at some level.