To all Biennial Attendees,

Now that everyone has heard about their abstract assignments for the SMM 
conference in San Francisco, I know everyone is frantically looking over the 
list of amazing workshops – WELL LOOK NO FURTHER!

You want to attend this one: Wikipedia as a tool for outreach, open access 
science, and in the classroom

This biennial workshop is presented by the Society’s Education Committee and 
Wiki Education Foundation. It has been sponsored by the Society for Marine 
Mammalogy to reduce the cost of the ½ day workshop to only $20!

This is a great workshop for:


1)    Faculty wanting a new pedagogic approach,

2)    Early-career scientists looking for new tools to distinguish themselves,

3)    Those interested in outreach and public access to science, and

4)    Those looking to increase their digital literacy in new media.

Workshop Description:

Wikipedia is viewed over 5 billion times a day and is the 7th most visited site 
on the internet globally. In most searches, Wikipedia is the #1 result returned 
for most marine mammal common and latin binomial names, and for the term marine 
mammal<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_mammal>. As a result the public 
accesses content on Wikipedia about diverse topics from 
Whaling<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whaling> to the effects of climate change 
on marine 
mammals<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Effects_of_climate_change_on_marine_mammals>
 on a daily basis. For example, the article on blue 
whales<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_whales> has been viewed over 66,000 
times in the last 30 days!

A common complaint of many scientists is that Wikipedia is not a well-grounded 
reference for information. Nonetheless, the people; including students, the 
media, and government officials; accesses information about marine mammal 
behavior, species facts, conservation issues, and taxonomy online every day. 
This issue is that contemporary knowledge about marine mammal species and 
conservation issues in the primary research literature is disparate, difficult 
to read and access, and not always free or open access.

As the premier international society for understanding marine mammals and their 
interactions with their environment and humans, the Society for Marine 
Mammalogy<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_for_Marine_Mammalogy> is 
committed to providing the most up-to-date information about these species to 
the public.

This workshop run in conjunction by the Wiki Education Foundation and the SMM 
Education Committee will will demonstrate how Wikipedia can be used as a 
teaching tool in the classroom, as a method for building digital literacy, and 
as a method to increase the free access to accurate scientific information.

Wiki in your classroom:  The Wiki Education Foundation was established to 
serves as the bridge between academia and Wikipedia. Since 2010, educators 
participating in the program have assigned their students to add content to 
course-related articles on Wikipedia. Students gain key 21st century skills 
like media literacy, writing and research development, and critical thinking, 
while content gaps on Wikipedia get filled thanks to students’ efforts.

Wiki as a tool for Digital Literacy:  The internet, and Wikipedia itself, is by 
far the first source of knowledge accessed by the public. Evaluating this 
quality and content of this information is critical competency for this 
generation of students. Furthermore, contributing content allows students to 
evaluate and assess articles online, a central part of learning to be a 
scientist. As contributors, they learn to summarize and concisely communicate 
information from reliable primarily literature sources. A key to being a clear 
scientific communicator is the ability to communicate complex ideas at a lay 
level.

Wiki as a tool for Open Access:  Wikipedia pages are viewed thousands of times 
a day by the public. Expert edits on Wikipedia increase the free access to 
current information about scientific fields, controversies in popular 
perception, and increases the level of public understanding. Expert content 
links primary scientific literature with the public.

The workshop will cover:
1) The basic functions, coding, and use of Wikipedia itself
2) The specific course content and support available from Wiki Education 
Foundation to educators who use Wikipedia
3) As a practical exercise, the attendees will participate in the 3rd SMM 
Wikisprint to update, correct and improve the content on Wikipedia about marine 
mammal science.

See you all there,
The Organizers Shane Gero<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:ShaneGero> 
(shane.g...@bios.au.dk)  and Jami 
Mathewson<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Jami_%28Wiki_Ed%29> (WikiEd)

****************************
Shane Gero, Ph.D.
FNU Research Fellow
Marine Bioacoustics Lab<http://www.marinebioacoustics.com/>
Institute for Bioscience
Aarhus University
Denmark

[home-icon20]<http://whitelab.biology.dal.ca/sge/> [Twitter_2012_bird_icon 20] 
<https://twitter.com/sgero>  [linkedin_logo20] 
<http://ca.linkedin.com/in/shanegero>

Learn more about The Dominica Sperm Whale Project at 
http://www.thespermwhaleproject.org<http://www.thespermwhaleproject.org/> Find 
us on Facebook<https://www.facebook.com/spermwhaleproject> or Follow 
@DomWhale<https://twitter.com/DomWhale>

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