Wikipedia:WikiProject Women's History/Taskforces/Women in technology
Scope of this taskforce
editThis taskforce, part of WikiProject Women's History, aims to improve the availability and quality of articles on Wikipedia about women involved in technology. We seek to analyze not only how technology has impacted the lives of women, but also how women have shaped the technologies that have become a part of modern life. The following are explicitly included as within scope:
- women as technical workers (examples: women as telegraph/telephone/railroad workers)
- women in engineering (examples: women as civil engineers, computer programmers, mechanical engineers)
- women's thoughts and reflections on technology in the fields of literature, history, and philosophy
This taskforce is not intended to address women's contributions to related fields such as science, healthcare, and politics.
Women of all nations are explicitly included in this taskforce's scope.
Overall goals/tasks to be done
edit- Ensure that existing biographies of women in technology are included in WikiProject Women's History.
- Where necessary, improve the quality of articles about women in technology
- Create new articles about notable women in technology, if they do not already exist
- Create general articles about technology that focus on women's involvement
Collaboration with other WikiProjects
editWe should look into collaborating with related wikiprojects/taskforces on this subject.
- Women in Science taskforce
- Women in Healthcare taskforce
General starting points
editWork to be done
editOverview articles by country
editGoals:
Countries:
Organizations
editList of organizations:
- Victorian Women's Post and Telegraph Association (Australia)
- Dansk Kvindesamfund (Danish Women's Society)
- Electrical Association for Women (United Kingdom)
- IEEE Women in Engineering Affinity Group (USA)
- Commercial Telegraphers Union of America (USA)
Goal:
- Create/update entries on organizations related to women in technology
Biographies
editGoals:
- Create categories for women by country
- Bring article level for each woman up to at least "start" (not a stub).
- create articles for notable women who don't yet have them.
- create and/or improve entries for women in the following special categories:
Engineers/Inventors - 19th Century
edit- Harriet Morrison Irwin (1828-1897), 1st US woman to patent an architectural innovation
- Amanda Jones (inventor) (1835-1914), American, invented canning process
- Clara M. Brinkerhoff (1830-?) American musician, composer, and telegraph inventor
Telegraph/Telephone/Railroad Workers
edit- Julia O'Connor
- Leah Rosenfeld
- Ma Kiley/Mattie C. Kuhn/Mattie Kuhn[1]
- Mary Macaulay
- Louisa Dunkley
- Women in the telegraph industry
Wireless/Radio Pioneers
edit- Graynella Packer
- Mabelle Kelso
- Gladys Kathleen Parkin
- Women in early radio
- Martha Wilkerson see GI Jive
ENIAC Programmers and Developers - 1940s
edit(Note: Stubs exist for many of these biographical entries, but they need to be expanded and improved with additional references and cites)
- Kay Antonelli (McNulty)
- Jean Bartik
- Betty Holberton
- Marlyn Meltzer
- Frances Spence
- Ruth Teitelbaum
- Margaret R. Fox
- Adele Goldstine
- Klara Dan von Neumann
- Kay McNulty
Computer Engineers/Programmers - 1950s-1960s
editVideo Game Developers - 1970s - present
edit(Note: these are mostly living persons, but now is the time to document their lives and achievements)
- Dona Baily
- Carol Shaw
- Carla Meninsky
- Julie Hoshizaki
- Roberta Williams
- Dani Bunten Berry
- Brenda Brathwaite
- Anne Westfall
- Connie Goldman
- Anita Clock
Activists/Social Networkers
editMiscellaneous
editGeneral resources
editOnline sources
editThe following sources are sufficiently reliable to use as references, and may be of use:
- SWE Pioneers, oral histories from the Society of Women Engineers
- Institution of Engineering and Technology archives
- WITI (Women in Technology International) Hall of Fame
Books etc
edit- Willard, Frances E., and Livermore, Mary A., Eds. American Women: Fifteen Hundred Biographies with over 1,400 Portraits. New York, Chicago, and Springfield, Ohio: Mast, Crowell & Kirkpatrick, 1897.