Wikipedia 2.0

This study examines the degree to which Wikipedia entries cite or reference research and scholarship, and whether that research and scholarship is generally available to readers. Working on the assumption that where Wikipedia provides links to research and scholarship that readers can readily consult, it increases the authority, reliability, and educational quality of this popular encyclopedia, this study examines Wikipedia’s use of open access research and scholarship, that is, peer-reviewed journal articles that have been made freely available online… The results suggest that much more can be done to enrich and enhance this encyclopedia’s representation of the current state of knowledge. To assist in this process, the study provides a guide to help Wikipedia contributors locate and utilize open access research and scholarship in creating and editing encyclopedia entries.

from What Open Access Research Can Do for Wikipedia, First Monday, volume 12, number 3 (March 2007)

It’s slow reading, I know, but this study illustrates what I think might be the next stage of Wikipedia’s evolution: scientific respectability. Willinsky calls Wikiepeidia, “literacy’s ultimate democracy,” and makes a compelling case for finding ways of integrating open access science into the online encyclopedia. It seems to me a marriage made, uh, here on Earth somewhere. Here’s an introduction to open access science, by Peter Stuber.

Librarian Chick!

Hello, and welcome to Librarian Chick!

This a list of free resources for students and educators… and anyone else who’s hip to learning. Feel free to click away! Though many of these resources could be listed under multiple categories, I’ve only added them once so you can CTRL+Click all links to open in tabs and never open the same page twice.

Librarian Chick

This is one of those self-evidently useful sites, full of information gathered from 6 years of software reviewing at TuCows huge shareware website. The Library Chick herself says it’s “a list of free resources for students and educators… and anyone else who’s hip to learning.”

She also points to FOSSwiki (a site for Freeware and Open Source Software) and her blog, “She Dreams in Digital.” As if that were not enough, she includes Librarian Chick Learning Center’(“search for free educational information, sites, games and software online!”), and Librarian Chick | Book Search (a tool to search for free ebooks).