Wikipedia:University of Edinburgh/Student Experience Project/LGBTQ+ Page

Info about the event

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As part of a wider Wikipedia project this strand is seeking to improve public knowledge of Scotland's LGBTQ+ history, and to help make Scotland's long-standing connections to the LGBTQ+ community understood. Wikipedia is one of the most widely used means by which people get information, but it has lots of gaps. This project will work to make it better representative of LGBTQ+ communities. This might mean creating a page for alumni, an exhibition, or project, ensuring that it fully represents research-based understandings of this activity.

Editing

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Questions about editing? Read the Wiki-editing FAQ!

Worklist

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Articles Created

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Articles to create

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Articles to edit

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Things to remember

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  1. Wikipedia is a tertiary source. Articles are backed up by facts from reliable, published secondary sources. Primary sources tend not to be used.
  2. Write with encyclopedic content in mind. Not academic essay. Strip back your writing to the facts.
  3. Write accessibly with a lay audience in mind. Any jargon needs explained the first time it is mentioned.
  4. Write with a neutral point of view. Split text up into sections.
  5. Cite everything you write. Keep a note of urls (open access if possible), Journal articles DOI identifiers, Book ISBN numbers.
  6. Page numbers, volume numbers and book chapters should be included in your citation information too.
  7. Write in your own words as much as possible. Even close paraphrasing counts as copyright violation.
  8. Short quotes can be included but need to be attributed.
  9. Images have to open-licensed to be allowed on Wikipedia. CC-0, Public domain, CC-BY, CC-BY-SA licensed images are allowed.
  10. Open images can be searched for using search aggregator tools such as CC Search.
Want a headstart on learning more about Wikipedia? Go to our website. Email me with any questions.


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Here are some useful links to help you with your editing:

  • Read up to find out more about sources and verifiability.
  • Check out the notability guidelines and what topics can be written about on Wikipedia.
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After today

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Once you've learned the basics of editing using Wikipedia’s Visual Editor, I hope that you'll stay logged in and edit or create more articles. As a first step you may like to check out what What Wikipedia is not along with its 5 guiding principles: The 5 pillars.

  • Please sign your messages on talk pages with four tildes (~~~~). This will automatically insert your "signature" (your username and a date stamp). The   or   button, on the tool bar above Wikipedia's text editing window, also does this.
  • If you would like to play around with your new Wiki skills without changing the mainspace, the Sandbox is for you.
  • Check out upcoming Wikimedia in Scotland editing events.
  • Check out upcoming Wikimedia UK editing events.

Video guides to editing Wikipedia

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Want to keep editing?

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Glasgow

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Starting places

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Buildings & places

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Notable(?) people

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How do we approach this? What thinking do we need to do around writing these histories?

Sources

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