CZ:Recruitment Letter: Difference between revisions

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imported>Thomas E Kelly
(→‎Version 2 for Biological / Health Sciences: looking for input and criticism)
imported>Chris day
(→‎Version 2 for Biological / Health Sciences: major tweek for the letter. I think it needs to be more straight forward, This is my attempt at that althoug it still needs work)
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Dear (Insert Professor / Field-expert name here)
Dear (Insert Professor / Field-expert name here)


Please consider helping us write (blank) article.
Re: Please consider helping us start or copyedit an article on (blank).


Five years after the start of Wikipedia, many respected academic professionals are still extremely skeptical about Wikipedia's articles reliability and vandalism of articles by anonymous users. Citizendium's founder, Larry Sanger, was the co-founder of Wikipedia.  After realizing some of its flaws, designed the framework for a future online Wiki-based encyclopedia that was open to input by all with the gentle guidance of experts -- Citizendium. The article approval system on Citizendium is similar to peer review on academic journals.  Experts verify that the information published is correct.  This version is then locked in place until the article next comes up for approval. Users, who are required to use their real names and provide brief biographies to become authors, may continue to edit the wiki-file on the Draft page, one mere click away.  
Despite the success of Wikipedia, many respected academic professionals are still skeptical about the reliability of these articles, specifically because anyone can edit them. Larry Sanger, a co-founder of Wikipedia, has founded a new wiki-based encyclopedia that is trying to address this significant issue.


We are asking you, as an expert in your field, to join us as status of editor. Our request is not overbearing.  We ask you join our project to check it out and participate in helping others to write one articleHopefully, you will enjoy participating in great collaboration in our satisfying academic community and will continue to assist us in the best place to go for understandable and accurate public information on the world wide web.  
Citizendium maintains the strength of the anyone-can-edit model with three key differences. Contributors can no longer be anonymous, editing is under the guidance of experts and it uses an article approval system similar to peer review on academic journalsThe approved articles cannot be edited and represent the versions used by readers for reference; they are updated as new versions gain approval.


We turn to you because you have dedicated your life to academic pursuit in your field of choiceYour daily work affects anywhere from hundreds to thousands (or more) people everydayBy helping us with this article, you would be helping the entire world.
We are asking you, as an expert in your field, to join the project as an editorWe hope you will be interested in participating with others to write or improve the article titled (BLANK).  Hopefully, you will enjoy participating in this collaboration and will continue to assist us to become a reliable and understandable source of information for both the public and students.  


We hope to see you join our team and look forward to your input on (BLANK) article.
We turn to you because you have dedicated your life to academic pursuit in your field of choice.  Your daily work affects anywhere from hundreds to thousands (or more) people everyday.  With your input in this outreach project you would be helping the entire world gain access to free, understandable and reliable knowledge in your area of expertise.  


Cordially,
Cordially,

Revision as of 08:31, 4 February 2007

Dear colleagues,

We're starting an expert-led alternative to Wikipedia. We feel this is badly needed. And we want your help!

Many people have a love-hate relationship with Wikipedia. On the one hand, they love the free availability of huge amounts of information. On the other hand, they hate its amateurish quality.

So, over the past few years we've seen many calls by experts to descend upon Wikipedia and whip articles in a certain area into shape. But when experts do that, though, they tend to get beaten back by an anarchical and somewhat insular Wikipedia community.

Other groups have proposed, and started, competing expert-led wiki encyclopedias, with very limited success. It's quite hard to start a successful wiki. There is a serious hurdle to clear: critical mass. If people don't see enough other people working on the wiki, they don't have an incentive to work on it themselves.

Enter the very person who conceived of Wikipedia and got it off the ground in its first year, a Ph.D. philosopher named Larry Sanger. Basically, Larry said: "Enough is enough. We can do better than this."

So the co-founder of Wikipedia is leading the construction of a newer, more mature, expert-led, but still dynamic wiki encyclopedia project, called the Citizendium (sit-ih-ZEN-dee-um), or "the Citizens' Compendium."

http://www.citizendium.org/

It will combine robust public participation with gentle expert guidance and more carefully enforced standards. It has begun life as a fully independent branch (a "fork") of Wikipedia. That means you can edit--or replace--all of those articles you hated on Wikipedia. But we expect it to take on a life of its own and, perhaps, to become the flagship of a new set of responsibly-managed free knowledge projects.

But will it achieve critical mass? There is already excellent evidence that it will. In the first ten days of the pilot project, over 110 Ph.D.-level editors in many fields from around the world activated accounts on the pilot project wiki. There were over 500 total activated accounts in that time, and nearly 1000 articles under development. There were also thousands of posts to project forums.

And that's all without reaching out to mailing lists and professional associations. Most academics haven't heard about the Citizendium yet. We think that when they do, many of them will become strong supporters.

We are in the process of organizing discipline-specific editorial groups devoted to organizing Citizendium's work. We hope you will join us soon in the INSERT HERE group.

In the meanwhile, if you'd like to sign up to join the pilot project--as an editor *or* a rank-and-file author--then please apply here:

http://www.citizendium.org/cfa.html

Let's show the world what is possible when strong collaboration is gently led by real experts, but still engages the general public. More importantly, if there are large quantities of information about SUBJECT NAME HERE available online, let's make sure it's of high quality.

SIGNATURE HERE, PREFERABLY FROM SOMEONE IN THE FIELD


Version 2 for Biological / Health Sciences

WORK IN PROGRESS - NEED HELP AND INPUT (including criticism)


To:

From: www.Citizendium.org Public Relations.

Subject: Citizendium, The Citizen's Compendium, is requesting your expert help for


Dear (Insert Professor / Field-expert name here)

Re: Please consider helping us start or copyedit an article on (blank).

Despite the success of Wikipedia, many respected academic professionals are still skeptical about the reliability of these articles, specifically because anyone can edit them. Larry Sanger, a co-founder of Wikipedia, has founded a new wiki-based encyclopedia that is trying to address this significant issue.

Citizendium maintains the strength of the anyone-can-edit model with three key differences. Contributors can no longer be anonymous, editing is under the guidance of experts and it uses an article approval system similar to peer review on academic journals. The approved articles cannot be edited and represent the versions used by readers for reference; they are updated as new versions gain approval.

We are asking you, as an expert in your field, to join the project as an editor. We hope you will be interested in participating with others to write or improve the article titled (BLANK). Hopefully, you will enjoy participating in this collaboration and will continue to assist us to become a reliable and understandable source of information for both the public and students.

We turn to you because you have dedicated your life to academic pursuit in your field of choice. Your daily work affects anywhere from hundreds to thousands (or more) people everyday. With your input in this outreach project you would be helping the entire world gain access to free, understandable and reliable knowledge in your area of expertise.

Cordially,

Citizendium Public Relations Team


Information written on Citizendium is copy-written to the author and under the Free License agreement, information can be used on other sources if the authors are recognized.


brainstorming - a version of the ever changing wiki-media draft file in place to guarantee its reliability.

version 3

version 4

version 5

version 6