Join the African American Museum & Library at Oakland and the Oakland History Center for a virtual Wikipedia Edit-A-Thon focusing on the Black Campus Movement in the Bay Area. Participants will create and edit Wikipedia pages for the Afro-American Association and related topics highlighting the contributions of African Americans to college activism and the Black Power and Black Arts movements of the 1960s and 1970s. Participants are also welcome to work on topics of their choice in Oakland history and African American history. Beginners are especially invited! An experienced Wikipedia editor will provide training and support for new editors.
Event information
edit- Date: Wednesday May 26, 2021
- Time: 4 - 7 pm PT
- Location: Online on Zoom, hosted by the Oakland Public Library
- Registration: Free! Register to get the Zoom link. All are welcome.
Schedule:
- 4 - 4:15 pm - Welcome + introductions
- 4:15 - 5 pm - Guided explanation of how to edit Wikipedia for newcomers, with examples (experienced editors can hang out and edit during this time - we can make a breakout room for you)
- 5 - 7 pm - Open editing time, with breakout rooms for working together on activities of interest
Resources
editArticles
Books available for digital checkout from AAMLO and OHC
Archives and collections with relevant materials
- Calisphere materials from AAMLO and OHC, including many photos and scanned documents
- The Berkeley Revolution
- The Freedom Archives
- Independent Voices
- California Digital Newspaper Collection
- OPL resources for online research and learning
Films and audio recordings
Ground rules
editSee the Wikimedia friendly space policy for behavior expectations.
Participants
editOptional: Add yourself to the event dashboard to help us track edits and other contributions from this event.
Optional: If you have a Wikipedia account, you can also sign your name by editing this section and typing four tildes ("~~~~") in the list below. If you don't have an account, just write your name below (though it is recommended that you create a user account in advance of the event - create one here!).
Suggestions for articles to work on
editImprove:
- Black Arts Movement
- Black Power movement
- The Rainbow Sign
- Black Women Organized for Political Action
- Free Speech Movement
- African-American studies
- Sarah Webster Fabio
- Merritt College
- The Black Panther (newspaper)
- 1960s Berkeley protests
- Students for a Democratic Society
- Third World Liberation Front
- Third World Liberation Front strikes of 1968
- Waldo E. Martin
- African American Museum and Library at Oakland
Create articles:
- Afro-American Association - Draft:Afro-American Association
- Black Student Unions - Draft:Black student unions
- PACE (Pilipino American Collegiate Endeavor) - Draft:Pilipino American Collegiate Endeavor
Evaluate whether there are enough sources to create standalone articles (or just expand coverage of these topics in existing articles):
- San Francisco State BSU
- Donald Warden
- Benny Stewart, BSU chair, SFSU
Expand related articles:
- Student society#United States - add contributions of Black Student Unions
- San Francisco State University - improve related material
You can also explore and add to articles on related topics on the Oakland Wiki, which is a local project separate from Wikipedia. It welcomes both formal and informal contributions, including memories and original research.
Outcomes
edit- Draft:Afro-American Association - started draft with an outline and multiple sources
- Sarah Webster Fabio - cleaned up, expanded details, added references
- Black Women Organized for Political Action - added references and removed outdated notice tags that questioned its notability
- Black Arts Movement - added links
- Ella Hill Hutch - added a reference
- Aileen Hernandez - added detail and link about Black Women Organized for Political Action
- Multiple Wikidata improvements, such as Gwen Patton and National Association of Black Students
Resources for editing
editNew editors: if you'd like to practice some getting-started steps on your own, see the Interactive Editing Tutorial or Beginners' Guide to Wikipedia (account creation, article editing).
Page expansion and adding references
editTo get started:
- Check out the articles in the "Suggestions" list above, especially the articles noted as needing content expansion or additional references. Skim a few, and pick one that sounds interesting to you! Or pick a totally different article - up to you.
- Read the article carefully. Note down any areas that seem like they need improvement, such as awkward sentences or gaps in the story.
- Pick a sentence that doesn't have a citation. Look up the information to see if you can find an article in a reliable secondary source (newspaper, magazine, book, scholarly journal, etc) that contains the information in the sentence. If you can't, pick another sentence.
- Once you've found a reference you can add, edit the article and use the "cite" button to add it.
To add new content, the easiest process is similar:
- Find a good secondary source that contains information about the subject that is missing from the Wikipedia article.
- Edit the article. Write a sentence that puts the information in your own words or quotes the source. Add the source as a reference.
- Repeat! That's the whole process of adding content to Wikipedia. :D
Drafting a new article
editTo create a new article, it's best to start in "draft" mode. It's ok if you don't know much about the topic before you begin - you'll learn as you go along. Multiple people can work on a draft together.
To get started:
- In the "Suggestions" list above, click one of the "Draft" links. If it hasn't been started yet, it's in red.
- A good way to begin is to draft an outline: what are the titles of the sections going to be? You can look up and read a few references to get an overview of major themes or sections to cover.
- Save your edits frequently! It's ok to save when it's just a draft outline with a few notes.
- Your collaborators and you can each pick a section to work on, using the "Page expansion and adding references" method above.
- When a draft has a good intro paragraph, a few paragraphs with at least summary coverage of major themes, and sources for almost all statements, we can review together and decide whether it's ready to convert to a live article.
Inbound linking
editThe goal here is to help weave the web of Wikipedia: link to articles from other relevant articles!
To get started:
- Check out the articles in the "Suggestions" list above and pick one that you find interesting, or find another article that you're interested in.
- Read your chosen article and look at the articles it links to. Should any of those articles link back to this one?
- Search for the subject within Wikipedia. Do any of the articles in the search results mention the subject by name but don't link to it?
- Edit those articles to link to the article!
Copy editing
editWikipedia has a style guide including punctuation and formatting standards (Wikipedia:Manual of Style) and content guidelines for voice and tone (Wikipedia:Neutral point of view), and you can help fix articles to match them.
- Check out the articles in the "Suggestions" list above and pick one that you find interesting, or find another article that you're interested in.
- Read it carefully. Are there any issues with it? Are the sentences too long? Do the paragraphs need consolidating or splitting? Does it need fixing to match the style guide? Does it have a promotional tone that could be adjusted?
- Edit the article to improve it! Refer to the Manual of Style and Neutral Point of View documents to use Wikipedia best practices.
More Wikipedia events!
editYou can check out AfroCrowd and Black Lunch Table for additional suggestions, resources, and upcoming virtual Wikipedia editing events centered on Black history and artists, run by independent groups of editors.