 Hey, Wikipedia. This is Will Pint from Wikia Education. I'm excited to share with you a new tool or set of pages that we've been working on to promote equity lists on Wikipedia. So let me walk you through how to use it. First thing you need to know is that on Wikipedia, we've called these equity lists. And you can just search Wikipedia equity lists to get to this particular page. And the way that this tool works is it's based lovingly on women in red. One of my favorite projects on Wikipedia. Women in red gathers lists of women identifying individuals that don't yet have articles in English Wikipedia, but do have articles in other languages. And that encourages folks to write these articles in in English. The idea being that people already pass the notability threshold and might have some references associated with them to make it easier to write. And so with this page, the equity list page does is it does the same exact model but for these different sets of demographic information or demographic data. And so let's say that we want to write an article about somebody based on their nationality. We can click on this nationality link right here at the top. And I've got a list of African countries I've been building out and maybe we want to focus on Angola. So we can click into that page and if we scroll down a bit we can see here's a table. That's powered by the tool Listeria. And it's just doing a wiki data query. And if we scroll down a little bit. Maybe we want to write an article about Amelia Mingus. We can see right here that she's linked read just like everyone is. And we know that she's from Angola because that's what the query is set to. It also pulls in her wiki data item and the number of site links so we know that there's some Wikipedia pages that we can take advantage of. So to write her article we can just pop open a tab in a new window and we've got our article page here that we can start to fill out. And to get some information about Amelia we can go to her wiki data item. And we can scroll all the way to the bottom, which is where the site links live and we can see that she has pages and these three different language versions of Wikipedia so if we click on the Spanish version. We can scroll down to the bottom and we can see here are some references that we could use. If you don't speak Spanish or understand it, you can always translate it. And as you may or may not be aware you can always use a reference in any language version of a Wikipedia article regardless of what language that references and so we could start to synthesize all of these into a new article and we could put it here and then publish it. And then we'd have that new article for Amelia Mingus. And if we, if we go back a couple pages back into the equity lists. The nationality one is pretty straightforward it just gathers different tables of people by their nationality gender we focus along the gender spectrum, I've removed all male identifying individuals and female identifying individuals. So it's all the other remaining genders that you will see represented here, just because women and red art exists in Wikipedia skews toward male biographies so we don't need to add those at this moment. So that's what that list is focused on disability also includes medical conditions and sexual orientation gathers people who have various sexual orientations and are represented yet on Wikipedia, English Wikipedia and ethnicity is also breaks down by ethnicity so a lot of cool lists that you can use to promote making Wikipedia more equitable place by writing new biographies for folks. Some other really cool elements to this page that I want to highlight if we scroll down quickly. You'll notice there's a whole section about dashboard integration so if you're familiar with the programs and events, events dashboard or the outreach dashboard as it's called. You can follow this link right here to a dashboard training and that explains how to scope your programs or your courses and scoping. In this case just means that you're highlighting a specific list of articles that you want people into in that editathon or that course to work on and so a cool thing about these lists are on every single page if we click into ethnicity. You can see that there's an ID, a pet scan ID PS ID that's listed here, and you can just copy this number and paste it into your dashboard to scope your dashboard to this list that is below. And so the idea here is that you would be able to kind of elevate this list and encourage people in a specific program to do work on that list. Those are the equity lists. Again, you can find it by going to Wikipedia typing in Wikipedia colon equity lists. And I hope that you'll have an opportunity to use it. If you have feedback for it, please let me know it's a brand new resource that we just launched and it needs a lot of work, but I'm excited for you to check it out. Thanks everybody have a great conference.