Temple-Wood received national press coverage for creating Wikipedia articles about
women scientists, as well as her activism to increase their representation on Wikipedia. She made her first edit to Wikipedia in 2005, at the age of 10. She first started contributing to the site when she was 12, and it was when she was 12 that she was first harassed online as a result of her Wikipedia contributions. She began her efforts in regards to women scientists when she was in middle school. In 2007, she became an
administrator on Wikipedia and served on the
Arbitration Committee from 2016 to 2017. She co-founded Wikipedia's WikiProject Women Scientists in 2012; since then, she has written hundreds of Wikipedia pages about female scientists. Editing under the
username "Keilana", she began creating such articles when she noticed that few women who were members of the
Royal Society had Wikipedia articles. She told the
Wikimedia Foundation that when she first noticed this, she "got pissed and wrote an article that night. I literally sat in the hallway in the dorm until 2 a.m. writing [my] first women in science article." The article she is the most proud of is that on
Rosalyn Scott, the first African-American woman to become a
thoracic surgeon. Temple-Wood has also organized
edit-a-thons at museums and libraries with the aim of increasing the representation of women scientists on Wikipedia. In October 2015, she told
The Atlantic that she had identified 4,400 women scientists who did not have Wikipedia articles written about them even though each of them was notable enough to be covered by one. In March 2016, she gained international media attention because of her approach to the
online sexual harassment she had received: for every such email she received, she plans to create a Wikipedia article about a woman scientist. That month, she told
BuzzFeed News that with respect to her doing this, "My motivation is to channel the frustration I feel from being harassed into something productive." In May 2016, she told
The Fader: "As a Wikipedian, my natural response to seeing a gap in coverage is to start a project, so that's what I did with the Women Scientists project. The narrative of history has been dominated by men, and making sure that women's biographies are included in Wikipedia can be our way of writing women back into that narrative." Her work led to her being named as joint
Wikipedian of the Year in 2016, along with
Rosie Stephenson-Goodknight. == Positions ==