Wikipedia:Meetup/NYC/AfroCROWD/Recordathon

Afro-Record-a-thon presented by WikiTongues and AfroCROWD in partnership with Whoseknowledge edit

First-ever Wiki record-athon, held 28 August 2018

Open to All! Please sign up here edit

Afro-Record-a-thon presented by WikiTongues and AfroCROWD in partnership with Whoseknowledge Open to All
 
Editing
When:Sunday 26 August 2018
Time:Thurs 26 April (01:00pm-05:00pm)
Address:LaGuardia Community College
Room E-111, 31-10 Thomson Avenue Queens, NY 11101
 
Participants

Please sign up with your username here

You an also get an Evenbrite invitation and reminder here

About the Record-a-thon edit

Share your story with the world at the Wikipedia Oral History Record-a-thon. Wikimedia coaches and oral history volunteers will be on site to collect oral history stories and knowledge for a project meant to create oral history collections on the Wiki Commons project. Volunteers will also show participants how to edit Wikipedia and help answer Wikipedia related questions. This free event is being sponsored by Wikitongues.org, AfroCROWD, Whoseknowledge? and Wikimedia NYC. Refreshments will be available. All are welcome.

Please bring your laptop. All languages welcome and levels of Wikipedia exposure welcome.

Participants are welcome to come for either or both the training and oral history capture.

Oral Knowledge from the Afro Record-A-Thon Video Station During the Event edit

Event Agenda edit

We will open the area for registration at 12:30 PM, with introductions and the primary training session to start at 1:05 PM. Sign up to work on oral history recording at the sign in desk. If you would like help with editing Wikipedia or Wiki Commons item, let a volunteer know. We will have a brief time take a group photo at 3:30PM and time to share at 4:45PM. The program will end at 4:30 PM with wrap up to begin 30 minutes before that.

Event Information edit

 
Building E
Date: Sunday 26 August 2018; Fri 27 April 2018
Time: Sunday 26 August (01:00pm-05:00pm)
Location: LaGuardia Community College, CUNY, Room E-111 + E108 on 4/26 & E141 on 4/27, LaGuardia Community College
Who can attend: Everyone, but bring an ID card! The public can join CUNY Students, Staff, and Faculty
What to bring: There will be computers available in the lab. Guest wifi accounts available if you bring a laptop.
Create an account and register:
Transit: -Directions
Subway
Bus
Contact: Mozucat

Event participants will leave with the following:

  1. Perspective and the ability to discuss Wikipedia's place in the media
  2. Live publication of information in Wikipedia and instructions for seeing how many people read it
  3. Experience of having edited Wikipedia a few times in the typical way and recorded short interviews for WikiTongues and the AfroCROWD Wiki Oral Knowledge and History Project
  4. Opportunity to meet with others interested in oral knowledge and history and the tie with technology and the Wiki and open source community

List of suggested articles edit

Advanced support edit

Uploading to Wikimedia Commons:

Translations: The best way to get started at this event is to talk in person with one of the trainers at the event. As advanced preparation, anyone might select a Wikipedia article which interests them and which they might like to translate at the event. The best way to learn about oral knowledge and history collection in this context is to come to the event, listen to the presentation, then ask for assistance at your computer if you need it.

If you want to read technical documentation on your own then click "show" to the right and read the following guides.

click "show" to the right

A note on languages: We will be capturing oral knowledge is different languages as well. If you would like to write articles in different languages, check this out:

How to find the list of articles in which a Wikipedia article already exists

Suppose that one has a Wikipedia article in one language, and wants to see the other languages in which that Wikipedia article exists. Here is the process:

  1. Go to any Wikipedia article in any language
  2. In almost all cases, if the article exists in another language, the name of that language will be on the left side of the screen
    1. Click the name of the language to see the translation of the article in that language
    2. Ask for assistance if you go further than this, because a person with experience will be able to quickly confirm what any new user finds
  3. On the left side of the screen there is a menu. Look for "Wikidata item" or a translation of that phrase
    1. If there is no statement "Wikidata item", then go to Wikidata and search for the article's name in any language
    2. If there is still no result, that article has not been translated. Start a translation!
    3. After publishing a translation create a Wikidata item for the concept. List the original article there and your translation so that they will be interconnected. Ask for assistance with this if Wikidata looks confusing.
  4. If you find a Wikidata item for a concept, then the Wikidata item will list all language Wikipedia articles covering that concept.
  5. Use the Wikidata item to get the link to other languages for that item
How to find articles that need translation

These are the most common methods:

1. Use Wikipedia Gap Finder (you can customize your search): http://recommend.wmflabs.org/#Recommend

2. Using the English Wikipedia, find an article that interests you. Then, look to the left of the page, in the gray bar beneath the Wikipedia globe. At the tail end of that list of links, you'll see "Languages," and links to all of the languages that also have that article. Languages are spelled in that language's alphabet or phonemes. For example, you won't see "Japanese" or "French," you'll see "日本語" and "Français".

Is the language you're studying listed? If so, click the language to see the same article in that language. You can compare the two articles to get a sense of what one has that the other does not. If not, that means there's no corresponding article in that language.

3. Head to the Wikipedia in the language you are studying. In the search bar, type: WP:GA (this will also work with Wikipedias using non-Roman alphabets). You'll be taken to a list of "Good Articles" on that language's Wikipedia, the best articles it has to offer. (You may need to find the page that lists them, if it's separate). Find a Good Article on your target language's Wikipedia. Check the bar on the side to see if there is a corresponding article in English. If there isn't, great! You can translate the article into English, and contribute it to the English Wikipedia.

Sometimes, the article exists, but is very short. That's OK, too. However, if both languages have well-developed pages on the topic, you will want to find another article. It can be very challenging to add content to an already-developed article.

Try the tool

You can access the tool from Special:ContentTranslation from Wikipedia in any language. Accessing it for the first time will also enable the tool for that wiki.


Content translation is available [[<tvar|beta>Special:MyLanguage/Beta Features</>|as a beta feature]] in all Wikipedias for logged-in users. Once it is enabled, you will see additional entry points to easily start a translation from your "contributions" page or from the list of languages of Wikipedia articles when they are missing in your language.


<translate> Screencast showing how to use Content Translation</translate>

Keyboard Localization edit

For best practices when it comes to working with Latin-Extended and non-Latin character sets, see our Keyboard Optimization Guide.

Advanced support edit

The best way to get started at this event is to talk in person with one of the trainers at the event. As advanced preparation, anyone might select a Wikipedia article which interests them and which they might like to translate at the event. The best way to learn about oral knowledge and history collection in this context is to come to the event, listen to the presentation, then ask for assistance at your computer if you need it.

If you want to read technical documentation on your own then click "show" to the right and read the following guides.

click "show" to the right

A note on languages: We will be capturing oral knowledge is different languages as well. If you would like to write articles in different languages, check this out:

How to find the list of articles in which a Wikipedia article already exists

Suppose that one has a Wikipedia article in one language, and wants to see the other languages in which that Wikipedia article exists. Here is the process:

  1. Go to any Wikipedia article in any language
  2. In almost all cases, if the article exists in another language, the name of that language will be on the left side of the screen
    1. Click the name of the language to see the translation of the article in that language
    2. Ask for assistance if you go further than this, because a person with experience will be able to quickly confirm what any new user finds
  3. On the left side of the screen there is a menu. Look for "Wikidata item" or a translation of that phrase
    1. If there is no statement "Wikidata item", then go to Wikidata and search for the article's name in any language
    2. If there is still no result, that article has not been translated. Start a translation!
    3. After publishing a translation create a Wikidata item for the concept. List the original article there and your translation so that they will be interconnected. Ask for assistance with this if Wikidata looks confusing.
  4. If you find a Wikidata item for a concept, then the Wikidata item will list all language Wikipedia articles covering that concept.
  5. Use the Wikidata item to get the link to other languages for that item
How to find articles that need translation

These are the most common methods:

1. Use Wikipedia Gap Finder (you can customize your search): http://recommend.wmflabs.org/#Recommend

2. Using the English Wikipedia, find an article that interests you. Then, look to the left of the page, in the gray bar beneath the Wikipedia globe. At the tail end of that list of links, you'll see "Languages," and links to all of the languages that also have that article. Languages are spelled in that language's alphabet or phonemes. For example, you won't see "Japanese" or "French," you'll see "日本語" and "Français".

Is the language you're studying listed? If so, click the language to see the same article in that language. You can compare the two articles to get a sense of what one has that the other does not. If not, that means there's no corresponding article in that language.

3. Head to the Wikipedia in the language you are studying. In the search bar, type: WP:GA (this will also work with Wikipedias using non-Roman alphabets). You'll be taken to a list of "Good Articles" on that language's Wikipedia, the best articles it has to offer. (You may need to find the page that lists them, if it's separate). Find a Good Article on your target language's Wikipedia. Check the bar on the side to see if there is a corresponding article in English. If there isn't, great! You can translate the article into English, and contribute it to the English Wikipedia.

Sometimes, the article exists, but is very short. That's OK, too. However, if both languages have well-developed pages on the topic, you will want to find another article. It can be very challenging to add content to an already-developed article.

Try the tool

You can access the tool from Special:ContentTranslation from Wikipedia in any language. Accessing it for the first time will also enable the tool for that wiki.


Content translation is available [[<tvar|beta>Special:MyLanguage/Beta Features</>|as a beta feature]] in all Wikipedias for logged-in users. Once it is enabled, you will see additional entry points to easily start a translation from your "contributions" page or from the list of languages of Wikipedia articles when they are missing in your language.


<translate> Screencast showing how to use Content Translation</translate>

Keyboard Localization edit

For best practices when it comes to working with Latin-Extended and non-Latin character sets, see our Keyboard Optimization Guide.

Thanks edit

Thanks to the organizations and projects which are supporting this event!

Sign up edit

To sign up for this event: Log in or create an account.

Attendees edit