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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Sue_GardnerSue Gardner - Wikipedia

    Sue Gardner (born May 11, 1967) [2] is a Canadian journalist, not-for-profit executive and business executive. She was the executive director of the Wikimedia Foundation from December 2007 until May 2014, [3] and before that was the director of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's website and online news outlets.

    • The Backstory
    • The Lessons
    • Why It Matters
    • The Long Conversation
    • Looking Ahead

    When the Knight Foundation asked Sue Gardner to write an articleon the rather earnest subject of "the future of public broadcasting," her initial reaction was "meh." But she was curious: is it really over for public broadcasting? Does it even matter anymore? Did it ever? So she dove into the research, traveling internationally, consulting with hist...

    According to the research Gardner examined, public service media compared to commercial media produces: 1. more hard news 2. more international news 3. more domestic politics 4. more current affairs programming 5. more coverage of public policy issues 6. reporting that is less sensationalist and more balanced 7. stories that focus on policy substan...

    People everywhere are increasingly disillusioned with how things are run. The Edelman Trust Barometerstarted measuring the level of public trust in institutions in 2001. In 2017, it recorded its single biggest one-year drop ever: 53 per cent of people around the world say that they believe the current system they're living under is failing them, th...

    For Gardner, the real measurement of success for a public media organization is its social and cultural impact, not economic benefit, and therefore not easily reducible to short-term metrics like ratings or market shares. "To paraphrase [nineteenth century British writer and thinker] Matthew Arnold on the nature of poetry: public broadcasting is th...

    There's plenty of sobering, if not downright depressing, data out there when it comes to the state of journalism and "the public conversation." But Gardner sees hope, which she bases on what she's experienced firsthand: Wikipedia. It's not shackled to any sponsor's expectations. It's relatively inexpensive, because it's without bells and whistles —...

  2. Feb 20, 2011 · 1) Some women don’t edit Wikipedia because the editing interface isn’t sufficiently user-friendly. “Wikis are not very friendly – that’s for sure! I guess I also in the rare 15% because I have not only edited but created Wikipedia pages in the past!

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  4. Jan 11, 2011 · The person tasked with steering Wikipedia's growth is Sue Gardner, Executive Director of the Wikimedia Foundation. A feisty former journalist and senior director of CBC.ca, Gardner was...

  5. www.forbes.com › profile › sue-gardnerSue Gardner - Forbes

    Gardner's roots are in journalism, graduating from Ryerson University with a journalism degree and acting as head of Canada's national public broadcaster, CBC.CA, prior to joining the Wikimedia...

  6. Sue Gardner builds organizations that give people access to the information they want and need. Her main areas of interest are technology, media, gender and freedom. In 100 words. Sue Gardner is a special advisor to the Wikimedia Foundation, the non-profit that operates Wikipedia.

  7. Be cautious about creating an insider culture. This is a tough one, because inside jokes and shared history and assumptions foster a sense of belonging. But every in-group requires an out-group, and having a lot of shared lore is unavoidably exclusionary: it makes it harder for new people to join.

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