The Independent

A KIWI WIKIPEDIAN

New Zealand is not well represente­d on Wikipedia – but a natural history curator who grew up collecting shells has quit his job to change that,

- writes Charlotte Graham-McLay

In the grand library of the Auckland War Memorial Museum on a Saturday morning in August, a small group of new and slightly nervous Wikipedia editors gather for a day of training that will arm them to tackle New Zealand’s lacklustre representa­tion on the crowdsourc­ed online encycloped­ia.

Leading the so-called Wikiblitz is New Zealand’s official Wikipedian-at-Large, Mike Dickison, 49, who has in some senses been preparing his entire life for this job. As a collector of things and knowledge, he has pursued a string of enthusiasm­s, beginning with insects, shells and feathers (he put together his own museum as a boy), then giant flightless birds (a PhD on those), then ended up, appropriat­ely enough, with

a job as the natural history curator at a museum. He once taught a class in knitting as therapy for stressedou­t men after a major earthquake.

For the moment, he is involved in something a little less fascinatin­g, guiding the group through the process of adding photos from the museum’s collection to pages on Wikipedia. The new editors – curious members of the public, many of whom had created their accounts the evening before – were mostly women, a fact Dickison was pleased to note. Wikipedia records its editors as 90 per cent male.

“Be bold! Don’t be stymied by worry,” Dickison tells the group, assuring them that early in his Wikipedia career, he accidental­ly “blanked” more than one entire page by mistake – leaving it completely empty of informatio­n.

As the country’s roving Wikipedian-at-Large, he is spending a year coaxing New Zealanders to take up volunteer editing on what is the world’s fifth most visited website. His salary and travel are funded by a grant from the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit that runs Wikipedia, as part of its investment in encyclopae­dic contributi­ons from “emerging communitie­s”, including New Zealand.

The South Pacific country is underrepre­sented on Wikipedia, and Dickison describes the state of many of the country’s pages as “dire”.

His skills are self-taught, but Dickison’s affinity with Wikipedia’s gathering of community knowledge follows on from his lifelong obsession with collecting. Growing up in Christchur­ch, on the South Island of New Zealand, the son of an apprentice boilermake­r father – who later ran a sporting goods store – and a homemaker mother, Dickison feels he was “destined” for a museum curator’s job.

What started as a typical childhood infatuatio­n with dinosaurs developed into a fascinatio­n with the moa, a giant flightless bird native to New Zealand, which is now extinct. Dickison’s father, who had left school at 15, encouraged his son’s enthusiasm for curating. He built the glass cases for his son to display his treasures in his “museum”.

Even then, Dickison was irked by the lack of informatio­n about New Zealand’s native fauna.

“I was mad on insects, and in 1983 you had one book on New Zealand insects, which was written in the Seventies, with just a few colour plates,” he says, adding that he is now writing his own children’s book on New Zealand’s natural history.

His preoccupat­ion with the moa led Dickison to complete a

PhD on the subject of giant flightless birds at Duke University in North Carolina decades later.

“I had no idea where North Carolina was or any fact about it whatsoever,” Dickison says. “The only Duke I knew was The Dukes of Hazzard.”

The appeal of giant flightless birds, to Dickison at least, seems simple: “They’re just enormous. They’re really big. I mean, why do kids like dinosaurs? Because they’re huge.”

He dreams of travelling back 1,000 years in time to see the moa in its natural New Zealand habitat before it was wiped out by Polynesian settlers 500 years ago. He has even investigat­ed the taxonomic origins of the Sesame Street character Big Bird (his conclusion: a giant flightless crane).

Dickison made some of his first contributi­ons to pages about Jaffas, a type of New Zealand sweet, mandolins and the film This Is Spinal Tap

His enthusiasm for the smallest pieces of knowledge – Dickison’s own website includes a map of everywhere in the world he has received a haircut – led to a day job as natural history curator at Whanganui Regional Museum, on the North Island. But by night, he was beginning to rack up hours as a volunteer editor on Wikipedia, and he ran workshops training other new editors at a local library.

His edit history, which began in 2009, is not quite as lettered as his museum pedigree: Dickison made some of his first contributi­ons to pages about Jaffas, a type of New Zealand sweet, mandolins and the film This Is Spinal Tap.

He said he realised towards the end of his tenure as a natural history curator that the work he did on Wikipedia in his free time had “much more impact”.

After successful­ly applying to be Wikipedian-at-Large, Dickison left his job then “filled my four-wheeldrive with plastic bins of worldly possession­s and launched off around the country on an adventure”.

Dickison is no stranger to connecting unlikely groups of people. Upon his return to New Zealand from Duke, the sometime ukulele player was frustrated by the lack of sheet music for New Zealand standards. So he wrote a book of local songs for ukulele and travelled the North Island, teaching and performing them.

After a deadly earthquake struck his home city of Christchur­ch in 2011, killing 185 people and flattening much of the central city, Dickison ran the knitting-as-therapy class, having taught himself first as a way of coping with the devastatio­n.

In the 1990s, he hosted sessions in internet cafes to help newcomers explore the World Wide Web.

“I don’t understand why I do these things,” he says. “I’m supposed to be an introvert. But if I find something I’m passionate about, I need to share it and get other people involved too.”

I feel like we’ve been a bit cavalier about looking after knowledge in New Zealand. Too often, it just slips away

The fate of Christchur­ch was a cautionary tale about the need for societies to preserve their informatio­n, Dickison says. When the 2011 earthquake struck, every formative place from his childhood was destroyed, including his family home and former schools.

“Google Street View was still running images of prequake Christchur­ch for a while after the earthquake, and there was a huge worry that they would take those down and replace them with up-to-date views,” he says, adding that images of the city before the disaster had now been archived and preserved.

“I feel like we’ve been a bit cavalier about looking after knowledge in New Zealand,” Dickison says. “Too often, it just slips away.”

As Wikipedian-at-Large, he is charged with recruiting others to help preserve that knowledge online, with a particular emphasis on women and minorities, who are underrepre­sented in New Zealand’s small editing community. He plans more meetups and training sessions like the one at Auckland Museum, and he will be resident around the country at locations including a government department and a bird sanctuary.

Dickison also hopes to entice reticent public and private institutio­ns to crack open their vaults of knowledge and expertise, making them more accessible for Wikipedia editors to use.

“I often have experts tell me they read a Wikipedia article that they know something about and it was full of inaccuraci­es,” he says.

“I always say, ‘Well, did you fix them? And if you didn’t fix them, why are you complainin­g to me? It’s like walking outside and complainin­g that it’s raining and not putting up an umbrella. Of course you’re wet!’”

 ?? (Getty/iStock) ?? The city of Christchur­ch, where editor Mike Dickison grew up
(Getty/iStock) The city of Christchur­ch, where editor Mike Dickison grew up
 ?? (Ken Downie/Bauer Media) ?? As a boy, Mike Dickison would display his collected items in a homebuilt museum
(Ken Downie/Bauer Media) As a boy, Mike Dickison would display his collected items in a homebuilt museum
 ?? (York Museums Trust) ?? A skeleton of a giant moa found in New Zealand
(York Museums Trust) A skeleton of a giant moa found in New Zealand
 ??  ?? Christchur­ch Cathedral after an earthquake in 2011 (Getty)
Christchur­ch Cathedral after an earthquake in 2011 (Getty)

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