Librarians as Wikipedians: from Library History to “Librarianship and Human Rights”

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Librarians as Wikipedians: from Library History to “Librarianship and Human Rights”
Authors
Kathleen de la Peña McCook
Publication date
2014
Links
Original

Librarians as Wikipedians: from Library History to “Librarianship and Human Rights” - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2014, written by Kathleen de la Peña McCook.

Overview

Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia built collaboratively using wiki software, is the most visited reference site on the web. Only 270 librarians identify as Wikipedians of 21,431,799 Wikipedians with named accounts. This needs to change. Understanding Wikipedia is essential to teaching information literacy and editing Wikipedia is essential to foster successful information-seeking behavior. Librarians who become skilled Wikipedians will maintain the centrality of librarianship to knowledge management in the 21st century—especially through active participation in crowdsourcing. Crowdsourcing is the online participation model that makes use of the collective intelligence of online communities for specific purposes in this case creating and editing articles for Wikipedia.

Embed

Wikipedia Quality

McCook, Kathleen de la Peña. (2014). "[[Librarians as Wikipedians: from Library History to “Librarianship and Human Rights”]]".

English Wikipedia

{{cite journal |last1=McCook |first1=Kathleen de la Peña |title=Librarians as Wikipedians: from Library History to “Librarianship and Human Rights” |date=2014 |url=https://wikipediaquality.com/wiki/Librarians_as_Wikipedians:_from_Library_History_to_“Librarianship_and_Human_Rights”}}

HTML

McCook, Kathleen de la Peña. (2014). &quot;<a href="https://wikipediaquality.com/wiki/Librarians_as_Wikipedians:_from_Library_History_to_“Librarianship_and_Human_Rights”">Librarians as Wikipedians: from Library History to “Librarianship and Human Rights”</a>&quot;.