This document outlines a presentation given by Carme Fenoll and Àlex Hinojo at the British Library in London in April 2013 about collaborating with public libraries to engage institutional staff. It discusses projects like having a Wikipedian in Residence, teaching librarians how to edit Wikipedia, establishing an early users workgroup, highlighting pioneering women librarians, organizing wiki reading clubs, and sharing search engines. It concludes that both public libraries and Wikipedia have social importance, that the collaboration can be mind-changing, and provides an opportunity to interact with other cultural heritage organizations through small, scalable and self-sustaining projects.
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Engaging Institutional Staff: Collaborating with Public Libraries Network
1. Carme Fenoll & Àlex Hinojo | British Library | London | April 2013
Engaging institutional staff:
Collaborating with a whole
network of Public Libraries
Marti rj- Wikimedia Commons- CC-BY-SA
@carmefenoll & @kippelboy representing @bibliotequescat & @wikimediacat | CC-BY-SA
2. Who?
@Kippelboy
#glamwiki Project Manager at @wikimediacat.
Creator of @CatalanMuseums.
Digital Renaissance promoter in Europe.
Barcelona
@CarmeFenoll
Head of Catalan Network of public Libraries @bibliotequescat
Government of Catalonia. Ministry of Culture
Libraries change lives.
Palafrugell
http://exploradoreselectronicos.net/e4pedia/Imagen:Topolog%C3%ADas_de_red.gif CC-BY-SA From #netdemocracy en CCCB
15. Conclusions & next steps
Marti rj- Wikimedia Commons- CC-BY-SA
● Both public libraries and Wikipedia have social centrality
●
Mindchanging both for librarians and users
● Excuse for interacting with other GLAMs
● Small, scalable projects & self-sustainable projects
●
Do less reading guides and do more Wikipedia Articles
16. Carme Fenoll & Àlex Hinojo | British Library | London | April 2013
Marti rj- Wikimedia Commons- CC-BY-SA
Thanks! Go wiki. Go glamwiki !
www.glamwiki.org | #glamwiki CC-BY-SA