 So, first of all, at the get go, I just wanted to say thank you very much to Wikimedia Australia for the grant that has enabled this project to proceed. Special thanks also to Linda Pascal, who's been a great partner to work with on this four-month project. I'm just going to give it a little bit of a project overview and talk about some of the achievements of the project and then I'll hand it over to Linda to talk more about her Wikimedia in residence experience and some of the particular achievements that she was able to produce during the four-month project and then some time for questions at the end. The main idea was to enhance discoverability of digital library collections at the University of Divinity where I work by using a range of different Wikimedia platforms. We were able to appoint Linda as a Wikipedia in residence because of me working in a library and having access to a number of publications related to Australian women in religion. We were able to digitise some of those publications. One was the Women Church Journal, which was an Australian journal of feminist studies in religion. So, we digitised about 40 issues of those and they were published between 1987 and 2007 and then we had quite a number of newsletters produced by the Movement for the Ordination of Women and they also had produced about three different conference proceedings and they were all digitised as well. The wider project is the Australian Women in Religion project but this project really we were honing in on women and publications that tied in with kind of early Christian feminism in Australia. So, kind of 1980s, 1990s kind of period. So, after we digitised the material at my library, we then added that content to initially the University's Digital Collections website but then we also added it to the JSTOR platform to hopefully enhance discoverability and having on JSTOR meant that we then had permanent URLs that could then provide links to reliable source material that we could then use in Wikipedia articles and then both Linda and I created and improved a number of Wikidata items and Wikipedia articles and they were both, they were related to women's groups and also some of the publications associated with those groups and then we proceeded to add those links to various Wikidata items and Wikipedia articles. When Linda and I first got together, we had a bit of a brainstorming process and we kind of divided up our kind of work so that, you know, we weren't treading on each other's toes and so Linda was, you know, way more interested in the movement of the ordination of women and sort of she just kind of went to town with that and I was more interested in the Women's Church Journal. I'd previously worked on another project where we had actually gone through that journal in a lot more detail and I'd already created a number of Wikipedia articles for women who were associated with that journal. So, this is just a screenshot of a page on JSTOR, so this is just the page for the Women's Church Archive, there were sort of 40 issues of the journal that were digitized so you obviously can click onto each item, every page then has a different URL which can then, you know, down to the article level, you can then use those links to add to Wikipedia articles. These are just an example of the kind of links that we added to Wikipedia articles and also the bottom one is in a Wikidata item. So, they tended to be in the external link section so if a woman, say, was involved, you know, was an editor of Women's Church then we would add the complete archive at the bottom and then sometimes in select publications we could just link to the particular article on the JSTOR platform. As part of the process I had created Wikipedia articles for each of the publications that we digitized, so on the Wikidata item for each of those publications we could then add full work available at URL and have the link there as well. So, we created two dashboards basically because we're working on two different aspects to the project so one was more for Linda's articles and one was more for mine and I've just recorded some of the totals there for the two dashboards together. So, the 26 articles created over that four month period that includes Wikipedia articles and Wikidata articles. There are quite a number of that we just edited and improved and you can see there the other stats. So, when I look today we're up to about 63,000 article views which is kind of a bit hard to comprehend but yeah it's all very, it's been a really interesting learning curve, the whole project. A few other outcomes for the project. Linda can talk more about her Wikimedia in residence experience and report. I've drafted an article about the whole project and hoping to submit that to a peer reviewed publication in the coming months. It was interesting to move away from the sort of biographical articles that I'd mainly focused on before and to kind of also write articles about publications and also women's Christian feminist groups as well. I did get the opportunity to present at a seminar in Brisbane in July. The seminar was called Breaking Through the Stained Glass Ceiling Women in the Church Past, Present and Future so it was really kind of spot on seminar and a lot of people there very interested in the project as well. And then I'm also presenting in November at the Australian and New Zealand Theological Library Association Conference in Christchurch. We also shared a newsletter in August about the project just kind of general information about what we'd achieved and what we were doing and then that newsletter itself was then shared on several other blog posts and other media platforms. What we haven't got to yet is the kind of the analysis of the data from looking at the digital platforms and to see if traffic does increase over time, potential to look at the referring URL to see if traffic is indeed coming from Wikipedia kind of platforms. So that's kind of next step. I think we're just kind of having a bit of a breather for a little while before we kind of then start to look at that data again. That's a very brief kind of overview of what we were trying to achieve. So I'm very happy to hand over to Linda and she can talk more about the experience from her point of view. So as Kerry said that I focused on the movement for the ordination of women then their newsletters and also the articles about the women who were danged as a result of those lobbying and also I made lots of links sort of connected up a lot of existing articles about ordination in the Anglican church in Australia and worldwide because it turns out there's sort of a lot of articles related to the ordination of women but they were kind of in silos and that they weren't very well linked so linked a lot of them up now. And you have to sort of read them all to get the whole picture and the whole history. Also I updated our Australian women in religion editing guide that was sort of just a draft. So I turned it into a beginner's guide to editing Wikipedia for future editors who might join the AWR group. I was meant to add images to Commons to add more images of ordained women and into the articles and everything but yeah we had a problem with photographs because we just we can't find the photographer of a lot of things anyway. We can't get the free license released so I haven't been successful yet in getting adding images to Commons but I'm working on it. I'm working on it. Also part of the work plan we set out a work plan was to facilitate a future editors on it. We didn't do that during the project we'll do that in the future. From April to August what I created the method I used was to create two new articles that were sort of central articles that I could then link out from and could also act as sort of almost like templates or how to write articles about Australian men in religion. So I created two new articles about two women who I could work out that they were notable enough which was another issue in this project about making sure that the biographical articles that were women were notable. I created two new articles one was Peter Sherlock and one was Susanna Payne biographical articles and the the way I kind of proved their notability was that they're both women who were ordained in the first group of women ordained in Anglican church in Australia in 1992 so that they were firsts and they also both became deans of cathedrals which is kind of the next level down from a bishop so they they achieved you know high level positions in the Anglican church so I sort of put all that together and I wrote try articles about them and then sort of practice linking out to every you know every other article I could then used as references citations a lot of the movement for the ordination of women newsletters from the 80s and 90s so the women I was writing about because they were the first women ordained and they were active in male or supported by the movement for the ordination of women I was able to find reference to them in a newsletter so I could use that as a reference and then link through to the digitized newsletter on JSTOR and I also did the created a new list and it's the first time this list has been kind of properly researched and properly published and that's the list of the women who were first ordained as priests in Anglican church in 1992 all over Australia so there was a big push in 92 to get women to be ordained as priests and there had been kind of half lists before but but they had names wrong and they had their names diocese wrong and you know they were a bit messed up so I went through the newsletters the newsletters you know had a lot of information had photos and big celebration services and all sorts of things so I was able to you know identify the proper names of all women and get the list right so I published that and then we were able to use that list as every time you write an article about one of those women we can you know blue link their name and sort of link out and so it's kind of we've made a lot of connections in the ordination of women another thing I did so so I've contributed to updated about besides the ones I created I mean I only created three new articles really but then I used that and jumped over to about 22 existing articles relating to the ordination of women and sort of updated them or made extra contributions added new sections new information to them and of course kept on adding references from the newsletters and one thing I did because I kept coming across lots of in in my research kept coming across lots of quotes people saying things about whether women should be ordained or not I started adding that to a wiki quote page so wiki quotes one of the sister projects of Wikipedia and there was a page with only one quote on it from someone about the ordination of women so whenever I came across a good quote I've added to that page on wiki quotes so now there's probably about I don't know about 20 30 quotes for and against the ordination of women and some of them are quite hysterical you know like the guy who said and he was recorded in a documentary saying this the guy who said you might as well ordain a meat pie is ordain a woman anyway there's there's all sorts of things like that but they they're all documented so I was able also to put references and citations on wiki quote and then I was able to put the wiki the wiki quote template on a whole lot of the articles related to the ordination of women so you know how you can put templates on an article that says you know see see wiki quote for more information on the subject or see comments it's got more material on the subject so I put a whole lot of wiki quote template and I've also put a lot of see also lists in the various pages so people can so I probably referenced did about 14 references to the digitized amount of use letters and we'll see we'll see where the people go to the actual digitized material another method I used to do this was to sort of mine the newsletters so instead of starting from the article of the subject I was writing about is the way to do it is to start from the newsletter itself from the digitized document and look for events or names or people and then sort of take that little tidbit of information and put it in a relevant article and then you know use the newsletters so I found by by doing that and hopefully the more newsletters bolder the names of people so it's able to quickly scan through and find names and sort of use them to write articles about those people or include those names in other articles because they did something significant and I was also able doing that to identify over time for example bishops and dioceses who were against the ordination of women and some of them changed their mind over time so there's quite a number of bishops and dioceses in the church they've changed their mind and were totally against ordaining women as ministers and now they're full on and who've ordained women and so I've kind of recorded that on their pages on some of the bishops pages that they changed their mind or the diocesan pages or the cathedral page or whatever so I've shown that you know the changes over time through history and I've been able to document that by referring again to the newsletters the four main challenges I've faced was establishing a notability of women I think some of the notability guidelines work against women artists and women in religion I think for example there's a Wikipedia guideline that bishops are automatically notable so you don't have to sort of prove nobility of a bishop a bishop is automatically notable so you can put a page about a bishop you know write an article about any bishop but the problem is that women because women in the Anglican church have only been ordained since as priests since 92 and you have to be a priest before your bishop you know there's a very small pool of women who are now bishops so that's whereas there's you know thousands of men because they were ordained as priests all year so there's just various things that make it difficult to show according to Wikipedia notability that women are notable and we sort of have to work well another thing was that I found I was alerted to the fact that I was overusing citations just just generally I made it so I've got a history background which generally we're sort of using citations and someone put a site kill template on one of my articles and we had this big discussion about the language and many so and sometimes other editors have gone through and just deleted a whole bunch of references in my articles and I've had to go back and find them again and rebuild them and so that was something that I experienced and so I've had to go back and think about if I used too many citations and change some of my articles and delete some no free license photos that was a challenge but one of the big challenges is of course that this the ordination of women is still a live topic and it's still a controversial topic in some areas in the Anglican Church in Australia and that can lead to some some sort of discussion on talk pages and some reference sources that people have been using articles about the ordination of women some reference sources are really dodgy because they're they're against the ordination of women and they sort of vilify women priests so I've had to delete a whole bunch of those kind of sources and you know they're halfway to getting blacklisted as a source but anyway so this the Infra-Church politics is still happening about whether you should even mention the ordination of women because you know some people don't like it so um I like if the whole project for me was that on the 12th of August a bishop in a diocese changed its mind decided that it was a good thing if they ordained some women and so on the 12th of August there was a live on YouTube you could watch it a live service where this bishop who had previously been against the ordination of women decided that he could ordain these women as priests and so it was live streamed and so that was great a lot of people watched the live stream of these women being ordained and I set up a section in my a draft in my sandbox ready to go with the names of the women and what happened and how this bishop changed his mind everybody ready to go so at the end of the service the minute I put that section I updated that um page that diocese page or bishop's page and everything can say you know they used to be against ordaining women but now the change in mind some they ordained these three women and here you can even go and watch it you know and had external links in the references external links section that people could even go and watch the YouTube live stream of it at the same time that same day 12th of August at 11 a.m another um diocese installed a woman dinging in their cathedral so I watched two screens at the same time I watched both services on two different screens one on the television one on my computer and I had her information ready to go so as soon as her installation service was over I updated the cathedral page where the deans were usually listed and added her name as a dean so that that was really fun for me to do live updates history