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Editing Wikipedia Helps Professor Attain Tenure

Hugh Pickens writes "Lianna Davis writes in Watching the Watchers that Michel Aaij has won tenure in the Department of English and Philosophy at Auburn University Montgomery in Alabama in part because of the more than 60,000 edits ... he's written for Wikipedia. ... Aaij felt that his contributions to Wikipedia merited mention in his tenure portfolio and a few weeks before the portfolio was due two of his colleagues suggested, after they had heard him talk once or twice about the peer-review process for a Good Article, that he should include it under 'research' as well as 'service.'"

6 of 139 comments (clear)

  1. Over 60,000? by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe this guy needs to list Editing Wikipedia as his primary job and Professor at Auburn University as his 2nd job?

    1. Re:Over 60,000? by HungryHobo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      at least he's probably doing better than most professors in terms of being useful to humanity in general.
      If his edits are even half decent then more people will read them and actually learn something than ever will from many entire departments.

      Most of them never write anything of worth which isn't behind a paywall.

      an expert contributing his time to an open and free store of knowledge should be lauded.

      It really is amusing though how threatened some professors feel about the whole idea of wikipedia-like systems.
      I had one a while back who was so bitter that he spent time just about every class ranting about how awful it was. "AND YOU HAVE NO IDEA WHO WRITES THESE THINGS!!" meanwhile one of his more gifted masters students is mugging away behind him and mouthing "me".

      On the other hand I had another professor who pointed the class towards a particular wiki entry(and a specific revision) which he'd read and considered to be extremely well written and without error which explained the subject material extremely clearly.

  2. And rightly so... by Nick+Fel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If he's editing articles in his field, which will be a lot of people's first port of call when learning about it, then he's providing a valuable service to his discipline. If academics want Wikipedia to be a better and more accurate resource, they know what they can do about it...

  3. Any bets... by DataDiddler · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... on what percentage of the edits were to pages on old Star Trek episodes and anime? The over/under is 75%.

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    Working...
  4. Good scholar, good citizen, good "netizen", too by j_f_chamblee · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A search of the Auburn Montgomery website, produces several "News & Events" hits which show Dr. Aaij giving public lectures and supporting student scholars. A Google Scholar Search on Michel Aaij shows a regular publication record in peer reviewed journals dating back to the late 1990s, at least. This guy is a good scholar and, from the article, strikes me as a good colleague, even without the Wiki contributions. He deserves tenure. The fact that he found the time for this other form of service/scholarship on top of his other work is very commendable and I'm glad to see it included in his portfolio. The fact that this did make it into his portfolio is better for Wikipedia than it is for Dr. Aaij, who I think wouldn't have gotten tenure no matter what. In any case, I say "Congratulations, Dr. Aaij!"

    --
    The first principle is that you must not fool yourself - and you are the easiest person to fool. -Richard Feynman
  5. Likely had nothing to do with his wiki edits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nothing in the article suggests to me that his wiki editing helped him get tenure. In fact, it even says: "Michel expects his academic C.V. was strong enough to support his tenure without his Wikipedia contributions". There's no connection between the two. This is like saying that, since his name was also on his C.V., being named Michel helped him get tenure.