Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Meetup/243

    Women in STEM: Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics | October 2022

    October: Alphabet Run: G to H Women in STEM Geofocus West Asia

    2022 global initiatives: #1day1woman2022 Climate

    See also: Future events

    Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR)!
    Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our project's scope is women's representation on all language Wikipedias (biographies, women's works, women's issues, broadly construed). Did you know that, according to Humaniki, only 19.81% of the English Wikipedia's biographies are about women? Not impressed? Content gender gap is a form of systemic bias, and this is what WiR addresses. We invite you to participate, whenever you like, in whatever way suits you and your schedule. Editors of all genders are equally and warmly welcome at Women in Red!
    Online event
    1–31 October 2022
    Ada Lovelace Day
    Use social media to promote our work!
    FacebookWiki Women in Red
    Twitter@wikiwomeninred
    Instagram@wikiwomeninred
    PinterestOctober 2022 events
    Hashtag#wikiwomeninred
    Add to articles
    .
    • Authority control should be included at the foot of every biography: {{Authority control}}. It will remain hidden until relevant identifiers have been added to Wikidata.
    • Choose applicable Categories including relevant subcategories of Category:Women.
    • If applicable, add a stub template at the foot of an article:{{stub}}.
    Add to article talk pages
    .
    • {{WikiProject Biography| }} or {{WikiProject Biography}}
    • {{WikiProject Women}} if born after 1950; or {{WikiProject Women's History}}:: if born before 1950.
    • Editathon banner: {{WIR-243}}

    Inspired by Ada Lovelace Day on 11 October, once again this October we will be focusing on women in STEM, not forgetting environmentalists, sci-fi writers, and all others whose work touches these fields.

    We hope both inexperienced and seasoned editors will join us in creating biographies and other articles about women in all fields of science around the world, as well as their achievements, writings, organizations, and awards. This virtual editathon allows enthusiasts wherever they may be to participate in our initiative. Contributors are of course also welcome to add articles on any other notable women who deserve to be covered, for example under our #1day1woman priority.

    The main goals of the event are:

    • to encourage inexperienced editors and show them how they can contribute to Wikipedia by creating biographies of prominent women
    • to draw the attention of more experienced editors to the need for combating the systemic bias against the coverage of women and women's works
    • to promote the new/improved articles and images through social media

    What else?

    • Below, you'll see a section where you can list the articles you create this month, and another section where you can add the images you have uploaded to Commons.
    • This essay on creating women's biographies and our Ten Simple Rules might be helpful to newer editors. WiR also maintains a list of biographical resources to aid in searching for sources.
    • If you share any of the articles on social media, please indicate this next to the article name.

    Redlists (lists of redlinked articles to be created) edit

    We have a wide variety of red-link lists. Some of the most relevant to this priority are listed below.

    Crowd-sourced (CS) and Wikidata (WD) red-link lists: women's biographies in other language versions of Wikipedia:

    Note: for those listed in the Dictionary of Women Worldwide, some corresponding entries may be found at Encyclopedia.com or, for access to all, by signing up for the Wikipedia Library's free bundle and then using this search option.

    Redlinked names not currently included in a Women in Red redlist edit

    If possible, include a source.

    L'Oréal-UNESCO For Women in Science Awards= edit

    Participants edit

    Outcomes (articles) edit

    Promote our work edit

    Key:

    • Add FB after the article if you mention it on Facebook
    • Add PIN after the article if you pin the image on Pinterest
    • Add TW after the article if you tweet it on Twitter
    • Add IG after the article if you post it on Instagram

    New or upgraded articles edit

    Most recent on top, please, specifying upgraded if not new

    1.   Lindsay Morton
    2.    Qing Lan
    3.   Anna Manning Comfort
    4.   Jean Paton
    5.   Elfriede Tungl TW
    6.   Kathy J. Helzlsouer
    7.   Sonja Berndt
    8. Rashmi Sinha (epidemiologist)
    9.   Katherine A. McGlynn
    10.   Wen-Yi Huang
    11.    Nan Hu
    12.    María Constanza Camargo
    13.   Mary Pittman
    14.   Jane Garcia
    15.    Laufey Ámundadóttir
    16.    Ludmila Prokunina-Olsson
    17.   Regina G. Ziegler
    18.   Stella Koutros
    19.   Meredith Shiels - PIN
    20.   Pauline Hald - PIN
    21.   Amy Kremenek
    22.   Dawn Frank
    23.   Joan Redwing
    24.   Opacuincola gretathunbergae
    25.   Tove Birkelund - PIN
    26.   Aimée R. Kreimer - PIN
    27.   Jill Koshiol - PIN
    28.   Susan Shaw Devesa - PIN
    29.   Phebe Fjellström
    30.   Lisa Mirabello - PIN
    31.   Mary L. McMaster - PIN
    32.   Alisa M. Goldstein - PIN
    33.   Rosalía Abreu - PIN
    34.    Neelam Giri - PIN
    35.   Julia C. Gage - PIN
    36.   Lauren E. Hughes
    37.    Shahinaz Gadalla - PIN
    38.   Megan Clarke - PIN
    39.    Ruth Pfeiffer - PIN
    40.   Rebecca J. Troisi - PIN
    41.   Stephanie J. Weinstein - PIN
    42.   Margaret A. Tucker - PIN
    43.   AnnMari Jansson
    44.   Minnie M. Mathan
    45.   Maria Teresa Landi - PIN
    46.   Rabab Al-Kazimi - PIN
    47.    Mira Oberholzer-Gincburg
    48.   Ruth Huenemann - PIN
    49.   Jill S. Barnholtz-Sloan - PIN
    50.    Leslie B. Vosshall -improvements, - PIN
    51.   Anjali Roy
    52.   Stina Stenhagen - PIN
    53.   Margaret Georgina Corrick (also WIR-242) TW
    54.   Mia M. Gaudet - PIN
    55.   Hannah P. Yang - PIN
    56.  Cecilia Paredes Verduga - PIN TW
    57.   Marianne K. Henderson - PIN
    58.    Amanda Black (epidemiologist) -PIN
    59.   Christine Berg -PIN
    60.   Mary Peterson (midwife) - PIN
    61.   Patricia Hartge -PIN
    62.   Shelia Hoar Zahm -PIN
    63.   Terri L. Wilder
    64.    Ruth Etzioni
    65.   Isabel Garcia (dentist) -PIN
    66.   Ann K. Cashion -PIN
    67.   Gail H. Cassell
    68.   Nancy Goldman Nossal
    69.   Laura Forese
    70.   Hilah Thomas
    71.   Alice M. Laskey
    72.   Abby Ershow -PIN
    73.   Debra T. Silverman -PIN
    74.   Tracey Rouault -PIN
    75.   Laura Beane Freeman
    76.   Jessica Gill (nurse) -PIN
    77.   Adele Merritt -PIN
    78.   Carole Johnson (health official) -PIN
    79.   Naomi Lynn Gerber -PIN
    80.   Mary A. G. Dight -PIN
    81.   Marja Holecyová
    82.   Ellen Leibenluft -PIN
    83.   Deborah K. Morrison -PIN
    84.   Ethel Stoneman -PIN TW
    85.   Rachael Stolzenberg-Solomon -PIN
    86.    Véronique L. Roger -PIN
    87.    Mariana J. Kaplan -PIN
    88.   Karen Berman -PIN
    89.   Judith R. Walters -PIN
    90.     Kanta Subbarao -PIN
    91.   Constance Margaret Eardley -PIN TW
    92.   Adrienne Williams Scott -PIN
    93.   Linda Vigilant
    94.   Augusta Christie-Linde -PIN
    95.   Christine Rivett TW -PIN
    96.   Helen Lee Gruehl - PIN
    97.   Karin Schallreuter
    98.   Lyn Gilbert (also WIR-242) TW
    99.   Jerelle Joseph
    100.   Kelly Ten Hagen - PIN
    101.    Ida Urr
    102.   Juliet Sekabunga Nalwanga
    103.   Florence F. Arenberg - PIN
    104.   Mavis Freeman - PIN TW
    105.   Mounira Hmani Aifa - new (also WIR-242)

    Gnome-ish and/or minor edits on articles within Category:19th-century American physicians edit

    Did You Know features edit

    New/expanded articles featured in the Did you know... column of the Wikipedia Main page

    • Add here – most recent at the top with date of publication

    Outcomes (media) edit

    Add here – most recent at the top


    Press in connection with this event edit

    Event templates edit

    References edit

    1. ^ "Elizabeth D'Amico". Fielding School of Public Health. UCLA. Retrieved 9 April 2020.
    2. ^ a b "The 12 Most Influential Nurses of 2018". All Heart. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
    3. ^ Chenevix-Trench, Georgia (2004). "Who was Kathleen Cuningham?" (PDF). KConFab. East Melbourne: Kathleen Cuningham Foundation CONsortium for research into FAmilial Breast Cancer (published May 2004). p. 6. Retrieved 2007-08-01..
    4. ^ "UNESCO-L'Oréal Fellowships, 2013". Geneva, Switzerland: UNESCO. 2013. Retrieved 16 November 2015.
    5. ^ Phillips, Bruce E. (Sep–Oct 2005). "Science Spectrum Trailblazers: Top Minorities in Research Science 2005". Science Spectrum (Vol. 2, No. 1). Career Communications Group. p. 40. Retrieved 28 April 2013.
    6. ^ http://lattes.cnpq.br/1244339824188656
    7. ^ http://lattes.cnpq.br/1244339824188656
    8. ^ "Andrea Mantesso – Google Scholar Citations". Retrieved 13 September 2016.