CZ:Biology Workgroup/Biology Week/Academic recruitment/Letter: Difference between revisions

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'''Subject:''' Wiki Encyclopedia Invites Biologists to a Weeklong Open House
'''Subject:''' Wiki Encyclopedia Invites Biologists to a Weeklong Open House


Biology Week, an online "open house" for biologists, biology students, and anyone else interested, begins September 22 on Citizendium (http://www.citizendium.org/), the next-generation wiki encyclopedia started by Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger.  
Biology Week, an online "open house" for biologists, biology students, and anyone else interested, begins Monday, September 22 on Citizendium (http://www.citizendium.org/), the next-generation wiki encyclopedia started by Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger.  


We want to extend a special invitation to biologists at research institutes, colleges and universities across the world. The Citizendium project needs your specialist knowledge to become an up-to-date and reliable general reference work.
We want to extend a special invitation to biologists at research institutes, colleges and universities across the world. The Citizendium project needs your specialist knowledge to become an up-to-date and reliable reference work.


'''What makes Citizendium “next-generation”?'''
'''Why work on an online reference work?'''


Online knowledge projects, of which the Wikipedias are the most prominent, have shown that the internet is fertile ground for swiftly accumulating and sharing information. Online resources have clear advantages over traditional paper-and-print encyclopedias.  
Online knowledge projects, of which the Wikipedias are the most prominent, have shown that the internet is fertile ground for swiftly accumulating and sharing information. Online resources have clear advantages over traditional paper-and-print encyclopedias.  


Unlike traditional works, online information need never go out of date. Furthermore, cheap disk space, bandwidth and the potential participation of millions of people means that we can capture humanity's understanding of reality with far more nuance and detail. This is not the traditional goal of paper-and-print encyclopedias, which have typically sought to offer only mainstream views of the most important aspects of a small number of topics. Traditional encyclopedias are expensive to research and produce, and are only available to (relatively wealthy) libraries and consumers. The Citizendium, like the Wikipedias, is free-- and can be an invaluable resource for educators, students and private citizens worldwide.  
Unlike traditional works, online information need never go out of date. Furthermore, cheap disk space, bandwidth and the potential participation of millions of people means that we can capture humanity's understanding of reality with far more nuance and detail. This is not the traditional goal of paper-and-print encyclopedias, which have tended to offer only mainstream views of the most important aspects of a small number of topics. Traditional encyclopedias are also expensive to research and produce, and are only available to (relatively wealthy) libraries and consumers. The Citizendium, like Wikipedia, is free-- and can be used, reproduced and distributed to educators, students and private citizens worldwide.  


In the wake of Wikipedia’s wild success, many other knowledge projects have sprung up, from collections of pop culture trivia to earnest, specialist projects such as Scholarpedia and the Encyclopedia of Earth. As academic users know, however, the Wikipedia model is far from perfect.
NEEDS TRANSITION


Citizendium was founded on the proposition that we can do better. We have radically rethought  editorial policy and governance. We do not require citations for claims commonly known among experts. In particular, the Citizendium believes that if a reference work is to be truly useful, it must be reliable. Though anyone can write articles for us, we want and need experts to help insure that our information is correct and up-to-date.  
As academic users know, however, the Wikipedia model is far from perfect.  


We grade our articles according to their reliability, and put a disclaimer at the top of all of our articles with unverified information. Credibility is lent to an article in a very traditional way, i.e. by means of approval by experts ("editors"). So that readers know the articles they read are reliable, approved versions are closed to editing, but can be worked on further out of the public eye (on “Draft” pages); these drafts may themselves become approved later on.  
'''What does Citizendium do better?'''
 
Citizendium was founded on the proposition that we can do better. We have radically rethought  editorial policy and governance. Unlike Wikipedia, we do not require citations for claims commonly known to experts, and we require contributors to use their real names. Even more crucially than this, though, the Citizendium believes that if a reference work is to be truly useful, it must be reliable. Though anyone can write articles for us, we want and need experts to insure that our information is correct and up-to-date.
 
We grade our articles according to their reliability, and put a disclaimer at the top of all of our articles with unverified information. Credibility is lent to an article in a very traditional way, i.e. by means of approval by experts ("editors"). So that readers know the articles they read are reliable, approved versions are closed to editing, but can be worked on further out of the public eye (on “Draft” pages). These drafts may themselves become approved later on.  


By being online, our articles can be associated with large amounts of supplementary information. Of course, this includes the usual multimedia suspects: pictures, videos, timelines and so on. The Citizendium also strives to provide our articles with annotated bibliography, and, when the subject matter demands it, high-level, technical discussions of a topic (“Advanced” articles).  
By being online, our articles can be associated with large amounts of supplementary information. Of course, this includes the usual multimedia suspects: pictures, videos, timelines and so on. The Citizendium also strives to provide our articles with annotated bibliography, and, when the subject matter demands it, high-level, technical discussions of a topic (“Advanced” articles).  
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'''Biology at Citizendium'''
'''Biology at Citizendium'''


CZ covers many fields, both academic and beyond, but activities in the biomedical fields have been especially visible: Biology is second to history in terms of number of articles (followed by health sciences), and second in terms of number of authors and fourth in number of editors.  
CZ covers many fields, academic and beyond, but activities in the biomedical fields have been especially visible: Biology is second to history in number of articles, second in number of authors and fourth in number of editors.
 
'''Biology''' ( http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Biology ) was the first article to be approved in Citizendium. The article makes good use of our distinctive subpage system to direct users to related articles, bibliography, external links, photo gallery, videos and signed articles.  


'''Biology''' ( http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Biology ) was the first article to be approved in Citizendium. The article makes good use of subpages for related articles, bibliography, external links, gallery, videos and signed articles. This article's development also highlights how experts and non-experts work shoulder on shoulder at Citizendium-- it makes clear that public-expert collaboration works, and works well. A further opportunity for this kind of work will be "Biology Week" -- the first of a whole series of topic-dedicated weeks at Citizendium.  
This article's development also highlights how experts and non-experts work shoulder to shoulder at Citizendium, and makes clear that this kind of public-expert collaboration works well. A further opportunity for this kind of work will be "Biology Week"-- the first of a whole series of topic-dedicated weeks at Citizendium.  


'''What is Biology Week?'''
'''What is Biology Week?'''


Biology Week will be held during September 22 to September 28, 2008. This is a chance for biologists to share their expertise by creating and improving biology articles, or to satisfy their curiosity by browsing (and contributing to) articles on other subjects. Editors and authors from the Biology Workgroup at Citizendium will be on hand to help with the registration process, to answer questions, and to help new contributors get started. Citizendium is open to all contributors, expert and amateur alike, but we particularly need the participation of academics and researchers. Please join us for Biology Week!
Biology Week will be held during September 22 to September 28, 2008. This is a chance for biologists to share their expertise by creating and improving biology articles, or to satisfy their curiosity by browsing (and contributing to) articles on other subjects. Editors and authors from the Biology Workgroup at Citizendium will be on hand to help with the registration process, to answer questions, and to help new contributors get started. Citizendium is open to all contributors, expert and amateur alike, but we particularly need the participation of academics and researchers. Please join us for Biology Week!

Revision as of 23:32, 20 September 2008

Subject: Wiki Encyclopedia Invites Biologists to a Weeklong Open House

Biology Week, an online "open house" for biologists, biology students, and anyone else interested, begins Monday, September 22 on Citizendium (http://www.citizendium.org/), the next-generation wiki encyclopedia started by Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger.

We want to extend a special invitation to biologists at research institutes, colleges and universities across the world. The Citizendium project needs your specialist knowledge to become an up-to-date and reliable reference work.

Why work on an online reference work?

Online knowledge projects, of which the Wikipedias are the most prominent, have shown that the internet is fertile ground for swiftly accumulating and sharing information. Online resources have clear advantages over traditional paper-and-print encyclopedias.

Unlike traditional works, online information need never go out of date. Furthermore, cheap disk space, bandwidth and the potential participation of millions of people means that we can capture humanity's understanding of reality with far more nuance and detail. This is not the traditional goal of paper-and-print encyclopedias, which have tended to offer only mainstream views of the most important aspects of a small number of topics. Traditional encyclopedias are also expensive to research and produce, and are only available to (relatively wealthy) libraries and consumers. The Citizendium, like Wikipedia, is free-- and can be used, reproduced and distributed to educators, students and private citizens worldwide.

NEEDS TRANSITION

As academic users know, however, the Wikipedia model is far from perfect.

What does Citizendium do better?

Citizendium was founded on the proposition that we can do better. We have radically rethought editorial policy and governance. Unlike Wikipedia, we do not require citations for claims commonly known to experts, and we require contributors to use their real names. Even more crucially than this, though, the Citizendium believes that if a reference work is to be truly useful, it must be reliable. Though anyone can write articles for us, we want and need experts to insure that our information is correct and up-to-date.

We grade our articles according to their reliability, and put a disclaimer at the top of all of our articles with unverified information. Credibility is lent to an article in a very traditional way, i.e. by means of approval by experts ("editors"). So that readers know the articles they read are reliable, approved versions are closed to editing, but can be worked on further out of the public eye (on “Draft” pages). These drafts may themselves become approved later on.

By being online, our articles can be associated with large amounts of supplementary information. Of course, this includes the usual multimedia suspects: pictures, videos, timelines and so on. The Citizendium also strives to provide our articles with annotated bibliography, and, when the subject matter demands it, high-level, technical discussions of a topic (“Advanced” articles).

Though Citizendium is still fairly young (just under two years old) we have made significant progress. We have more than 8,000 articles in various stages of development and well over six million words in content.

Biology at Citizendium

CZ covers many fields, academic and beyond, but activities in the biomedical fields have been especially visible: Biology is second to history in number of articles, second in number of authors and fourth in number of editors.

Biology ( http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Biology ) was the first article to be approved in Citizendium. The article makes good use of our distinctive subpage system to direct users to related articles, bibliography, external links, photo gallery, videos and signed articles.

This article's development also highlights how experts and non-experts work shoulder to shoulder at Citizendium, and makes clear that this kind of public-expert collaboration works well. A further opportunity for this kind of work will be "Biology Week"-- the first of a whole series of topic-dedicated weeks at Citizendium.

What is Biology Week?

Biology Week will be held during September 22 to September 28, 2008. This is a chance for biologists to share their expertise by creating and improving biology articles, or to satisfy their curiosity by browsing (and contributing to) articles on other subjects. Editors and authors from the Biology Workgroup at Citizendium will be on hand to help with the registration process, to answer questions, and to help new contributors get started. Citizendium is open to all contributors, expert and amateur alike, but we particularly need the participation of academics and researchers. Please join us for Biology Week!