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| 💻 | Computer Science teacher in England. |
| 🧠 | Interested in computing education, digital literacy, and making concepts easy to learn. |
| 🔭 | Loves space, astronomy, and space exploration history. |
| 🛰️ | Enjoys articles about satellites, missions, and spacecraft systems. |
| 📚 | Tries to improve pages by adding reliable sources, fixing style, and tightening clarity. |
| 🧩 | Enjoys turning messy notes into clean, readable encyclopaedic writing. |
- Quick links
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About
I’m a Computer Science teacher in England and I edit Wikipedia to make technical topics clearer, better sourced, and easier to understand.
My interests tend to orbit around two big areas:
- Computing (especially education, fundamentals, and clear explanations)
- Space (astronomy, missions, spacecraft, and the science behind them)
Editing focus
- Topics I often enjoy
- Computer science fundamentals (algorithms, data, programming concepts)
- Computing education and curricula
- Spaceflight, astronomy, and mission histories
- Clean definitions, lead sections, and structure improvements
- The kind of edits I like doing
- Adding citations where they are missing
- Rewriting confusing sections for clarity (without changing meaning)
- Fixing tone to match encyclopaedic style
- Formatting: headings, lists, infobox cleanups, and consistency
Collaboration
If you want to collaborate:
- Leave a note on my talk page with a link and what you want improved.
- If it’s a big rewrite, feel free to suggest a specific goal (for example: “tighten the lead” or “add sources to sections 2 and 3”).
Space corner
A few space topics I never get bored of:
- Orbits, propulsion, and how spacecraft actually work
- Space telescopes and what they reveal about the universe
- Planetary science and the story of the Solar System
- The history of big missions and the trade-offs behind design choices
Working area
- Drafts and scratch space
If you’re reading this: welcome. If you spot something that needs a source or a clarity pass, I’m always up for a tidy-up.
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