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12 March 2012

 

2012-03-12

Liaising with the Education Program

On March 6, Rob Schnautz was announced as the Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program community liaison. The following report is primarily based on an interview with Schnautz conducted in the subsequent week over IRC and email; for the transcript of the extended conversation, see the Signpost's Interviews desk archive.


"I heard there was an encyclopedia anyone could edit, and I vowed never to touch it" – the first impressions of future administrator, ambassador and Wikimedia Foundation contractor Rob Schnautz, pictured here at a 2011 Education Program training session for campus ambassadors in Bloomington, Indiana

The relentless volunteer

On learning of Wikipedia's existence in 2004, Rob Schnautz was at first skeptical about contributing: "I heard there was an encyclopedia anyone could edit, and I vowed never to touch it". An initial flurry of "pretty unconstructive" edits in early 2006 were overcome after he acclimatised to the project, and under the alias Bob the Wikipedian he has since graduated to a fixture of the core community: "I've become one of the 3,000 top editors, an administrator (in 2009), a regional ambassador (in 2011), and now online communications contractor this month." In his capacity as a volunteer editor, he has focused on templates and stubs related to paleozoology. In spite of its tendency to attract drama (due to its scope and impact), Wikipedia:WikiProject Tree of Life's {{ automatic taxobox}} has been a landmark collaboration: "I decided to get involved with that, and I've been helping change the face of organic life on Wikipedia since then." We asked what motivated him to become involved in the education program initially, and later as a regional ambassador in the Great Lakes region:

I was doing some research on brown recluses one day, and noticed the banner at the top of the page wasn't asking for money, so I decided to read it; the Foundation was looking for people interested in motivating professors and students to use Wikipedia for educational assignments. So, I figured it couldn't hurt to see what that was about, and requested more information. Before I knew it, I was filling out an application and getting an interview set up for the role of regional ambassador in my region.
The regional ambassador role is a lot like your typical middle management job. I recruit campus ambassadors throughout the region, as well as professors, and make sure we have the resources we need to support their classes. I also check on individual groups of campus ambassadors and professors (we call these groups "pods") throughout the semester to make sure they're on track and to let the Foundation staff know how things are going so they can make their reports and make adjustments to the program if necessary.

Schnautz sees his brief as community liaison as "to bridge the communication gap between the community of Wikipedia and the Education Program", and explained what attracted him to the position:

I'm one of those guys who has to stay busy. Graduation was just around the corner, and since I like the education environment, it looked like a good way to stay involved. This isn't the first time I've volunteered; I volunteer for lots of things and usually enjoy them; it's satisfying to help someone purely to help them.

An evolving program

The Education Program is two years old now, and there have been several pilot schemes affecting the English Wikipedia to varying success, notably the United States EP (which pioneered the program with its well-received Public Policy Initiative), the Canadian EP and the Indian EP (deemed a failure by the Foundation). The Foundation have also launched pilots in Brazil, India, and Egypt, and Schnautz revealed that chapters in Germany, the UK, and Italy have expressed interest in organising their own schemes, as have volunteers in Mexico, Macedonia, Russia, Israel, and the Czech Republic. We asked what organisers have learned from the experience thus far:

We've learned that the most successful pilots are those taught in a language the students are fluent in, and we've also come to understand a bit more about the academic cultures of various parts of the world. For instance, we didn't expect to learn that in India, plagiarism is a concept most students are unfamiliar with. We've also learned that bigger isn't necessarily better, which is why we've begun enforcing a new policy that requires at least one Wikipedian supporting every 15 students.

Organisers had "found that larger courses became more difficult for campus ambassadors and instructors to effectively manage", something for which "an interface that's hard to navigate and seems to require a lot more effort to maintain than it's worth" was partially responsible. In response to these findings and to prompting from the community, the Foundation has developed a dedicated MediaWiki extension and a set of requirements for courses participating in the program from 2012 on, including stipulations that each classroom be assigned experienced Wikipedians and that the number of ambassadors needed to scale up according to class sizes. The intended impact is that the organisers are "hoping that we see higher quality in student contributions".

Schnautz (left) at a July 2011 regional ambassador training summit in Boston, Massachusetts

Although Schnautz is set to work closely with online ambassadors as part of his new role, he had not been involved with the group when he spoke to The Signpost and so was not in a position to discuss the issues Wikipedians have been raising with their selection, monitoring and orientation processes (though he later contacted The Signpost to highlight a list of ambassador principles). He had much to say on the topic of campus ambassadors, however, outlining the ideal candidate for recruitment as "someone who has some sort of experience teaching others, knows how to edit Wikipedia (or is capable of learning in a short period of time), has good communication skills, and is comfortable working in the academic environment", with the caveat that "The folks we choose as campus ambassadors aren't your typical Wikipedia editor, though. We take care to make sure their social side is well-developed."

Students in the program have run into difficulty with Wikipedia's community of editors, falling afoul of the project's norms of original research, plagiarism and inclusion criteria and leaving editors with substantial clean-up efforts (see reports of problematic contributions to medical articles by Canadian students and The Signpost's special report on the Indian pilot). In the event of such issues arising, ambassadors are expected to act as "teachers and guides" rather than taking responsibility for the students' edits or intervening directly on their behalf:

Campus ambassadors are expected to take all responsibility for teaching students to edit Wikipedia.... The idea here is that the professor shouldn't have to teach the students anything Wikipedia-related in order for the class to be successful.
The campus ambassadors take on a mentor-type role, offering pointers and help, but not fixing the actions of students. When conflict arises between a student and the community, the student is encouraged to stand up for him- or herself, and the campus ambassador will offer suggestions as needed. Also, the campus ambassadors are expected to review the edits of students and provide feedback on the edits. I usually tell my campus ambassadors to encourage students to find their niche in Wikipedia. If they're going to become a full-time editor, it won't happen by simply writing an essay. ... We want them to have the full experience any other Wikipedian would have. Plus some, of course.

A failure to communicate

Schnautz hopes to rectify the communications gap between the Foundation and the editing community; "The staff is committed to correcting their mistakes and doing better next time"

Why is a community liaison required at this stage in the program's development?

Following the recent discussions on the English Wikipedia, the Education Program staff have realized they aren't very effective in communicating with Wikipedians. That's why they've contracted me, an active Wikipedia contributor who happens to be very familiar with the Education Program. My support of the Education Program and my relations with the community are essential for someone communicating between the two parties.

The report by Tory Read on the India Education Program (IEP) found that "the majority of problems that emerged during implementation could have been largely avoided by engaging the Wikipedia community as a partner in the pilot project planning process". Asked how he planned to change the culture of communication surrounding the program, he laid out his plan for reform:

The changes you'll notice in the "culture" here are that the communication with other Wikipedians will actually be done by a Wikipedian rather than someone who doesn't really understand the ways Wikipedians communicate. I'll do my best to make myself available if there are questions or concerns, and if there is something that we can use the input of the community, I'll go out of my way to get that input from the community."

In response to the Read report's characterisation of announcement locations as ineffective and scattered, Schnautz declared that "I'm working on figuring out which platforms are effective for reaching the folks I need to reach out to. One of the goals in the next several months is to consolidate the program's pages so they're easier to navigate, with the hopes that this will also help centralize related discussions." He also highlighted those projects other than the English Wikipedia that needed to be catered to as one of the reasons why much of the communications effort, such as the program's newsletter, has been centralised at the outreach wiki rather than locally.

Schnautz acknowledged that the "need to refocus the IEP is perhaps the biggest reason the Education Program is being given so much attention this year", that "[w]e absolutely can't have the same problems happen again", and summarised the state of community relations with the programs in its wake as follows:

The current state of things is that Wikipedians don't trust the Education Program staff. If all goes well, my role as online communicator will complement any actions the Program makes. We've gotten into a sort of rut with [our handling of] the IEP, and hopefully this new style of communication will help us get back out as we plan for the second IEP pilot.

Closing thoughts

The purpose of the Education Program, as it is and as it should be, is something that has been the focus of much debate, with many Wikipedians interpreting Foundation executive director Sue Gardner's comments as prioritising the growth of editors and articles, others agitating to make the quality of the content the paramount concern and one editor, Mike Christie, authoring a Signpost opinion essay urging the initiative to refocus on recruiting the academics themselves. We asked Schnautz whether it is first and foremost concerned with editor recruitment, content creation, building relations with academia, or some other focus. Editor recruitment was "certainly one of the big goals", he confirmed, citing its impact on "both improving and maintaining the health" of the projects and the ultimate threat of Wikipedia's falling into obscurity and irrelevancy without it. He went on:

Content creation goes hand-in-hand with editor recruitment. If we have a steady input of editors, we get a steady input of content as well. After all, without editors, there's no new content. Editors are also required in order to update old content and patrol recent changes.
Keep in mind the influx of new editors also means an influx in experienced editors, since many students end up liking to edit Wikipedia. That's where experienced editors are born.

We asked what his message would be to those editors who feel frustrated at the impact of the programs to date, who resent being asked to deal with the influx of student edits, or who are skeptical as to whether the programs are worth continuing:

Our attention is increasingly shifting from numbers to quality. We're taking preventative measures as we gear up for the coming semester. Classes will be smaller. Experienced Wikipedians will be required in every classroom.


Whether such talk will win over a wary community remains to be seen, but with the Education Program on the cusp of dramatic expansion, its success or failure will likely have a significant impact on the encyclopaedia and the Wikimedia Foundation's relationship with the editors who maintain it. The Signpost will not be standing idly by; for an in-depth look at the activities of the program, interested readers can follow our nascent Education report in the weeks and months to come.

Full transcript of interview

The following is a transcript of an interview conducted by Skomorokh for The Signpost with Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program community liaison Rob Schnautz over IRC on March 9, 2012. The transcript has been edited to remove parenthetical comments, with minor alterations to phrasing and sequencing for coherence. It is made available by the express consent of both parties. For the edited interview which ran in The Signpost's March 12, 2012 edition, see here.


The Signpost: You've just been hired as the Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program community liaison. Can you tell us a little about your background as an editor?

Rob Schnautz: Sure. Back in 2004, I heard there was an encyclopedia anyone could edit, and I vowed never to touch it. But in 2006, I broke that vow when I looked up antimicrobial pen. I was pretty impressed that Wikipedia had an article on something that wasn't covered anywhere else, and just HAD to join it. So my first few edits were pretty unconstructive, but by the following summer I was uploading photos on backlogs. Since then, I've become one of the 3,000 top editors, an administrator (in 2009), a regional ambassador (in 2011), and now online communications contractor this month. Most of my personal free time work is on templates and paleozoology stubs. And I enjoy making SVG maps.

Templates, stubs and image creation sound like lonely areas to work in; what have been your most discussion-intensive activities besides the education programs?

Back in 2010 I heard Martin Smith was working on a project called the automatic taxobox. Scientific classification uses a sort of database-like structure, so this is something the logic-minded folks at the Tree of Life had been talking about for years. So I decided to get involved with that, and I've been helping change the face of organic life on Wikipedia since then. It involves a lot of drama at times, since it is relevant to a large percentage of articles.

What motivated you to become involved in the education program initially?

I was doing some research on brown recluses one day, and noticed the banner at the top of the page wasn't asking for money, so I decided to read it; the Foundation was looking for people interested in motivating professors and students to use Wikipedia for educational assignments. So, I figured it couldn't hurt to see what that was about, and requested more information. Before I knew it, I was filling out an application and getting an interview set up for the role of regional ambassador in my region.

Volunteering for such a task requires a significant investment of time and effort; what was it about the idea that appealed to you?

I'm one of those guys who has to stay busy. Graduation was just around the corner, and since I like the education environment, it looked like a good way to stay involved. This isn't the first time I've volunteered; I volunteer for lots of things and usually enjoy them; it's satisfying to help someone purely to help them.

Last year you took on the role of regional ambassador for the Great Lakes region of North America; what has that experience been like?

To clarify, two regional ambassadors were selected for the Great Lakes region, the other being Chanitra Bishop. Since we don't live near each other, we decided to split the region into two subregions, the Central and the Reaches. I've been working with the Reaches, which includes Kentucky, Wisconsin, and Michigan. The regional ambassador role is a lot like your typical middle management job. I recruit campus ambassadors throughout the region, as well as professors, and make sure we have the resources we need to support their classes. I also check on individual groups of campus ambassadors and professors (we call these groups "pods") throughout the semester to make sure they're on track and to let the Foundation staff know how things are going so they can make their reports and make adjustments to the program if necessary.

What is the extent of the programs that are engaged with the English Wikipedia in the current academic year? How many courses/professors/universities?

The Great Lakes Reaches subregion is actually the most active one with ten classes this semester at six universities. I actually was temporarily responsible for Ontario as well from November to February, since the Steering Committee decided they wanted to try having a regional ambassador pilot in Canada. Ontario has been more active than any state, to my knowledge, so it was sort of a relief to find out at the end of February that someone else would be taking over managing Canada this month. Oh, and you asked how many professors; we currently have six in this region.

And beyond the region, what is the scope of the programs involving English Wikipedia?

I don't have global figures available for Canada or the pilot programs around the world, but I can tell you there are over 50 classes affiliated with the United States Education Program this semester. We've also launched pilot programs in Brazil, India, and Egypt. Various groups outside the Foundation have been so impressed with the successes of the United States and Canada Education Programs that they are making efforts to start programs in Germany and the United Kingdom as well. Also, Mexico, Macedonia, Russia, Israel, and the Czech Republic have some volunteers stepping up.

The Wikimedia Foundation has made the education program one of its top priorities for 2011-2012 [cf. the mid-year report]; can you explain to our readers just what the primary goals are? Is it first and foremost concerned with editor recruitment, content creation, building relations with academia, or what?

Editor recruitment is certainly one of the big goals here. The Foundation is recognizing a shrinking number of editors, and we're not sure whether that's necessarily a good or bad thing. Content creation goes hand-in-hand with editor recruitment. If we have a steady input of editors, we get a steady input of content as well. After all, without editors, there's no new content. Editors are also required in order to update old content and patrol recent changes. In terms of the Education Program, the Foundation has recognized the India Education Program's shortcomings, and because of that, we're realizing we need to refocus exactly how we're doing it before we can bring it on as strong as it was last semester. This need to refocus the IEP is perhaps the biggest reason the Education Program is being given so much attention this year.

So, to clarify, the Education Program sees editor recruitment as the primary vector for improving the health of the project, and through that, the content of the encyclopaedia?

Both improving and maintaining the health, yes. Without editors, Wikipedia becomes one of those old websites that no one can really use anymore. An encyclopedia has to be kept up-to-date. I actually just pushed my 1965 World Book Encyclopedia out the door since its topics are hardly even relevant today.

The education program is two years old now, and there have been several pilot schemes of varying success. What have organisers learned from the experience thus far?

We've learned that the most successful pilots are those taught in a language the students are fluent in, and we've also come to understand a bit more about the academic cultures of various parts of the world. For instance, we didn't expect to learn that in India, plagiarism is a concept most students are unfamiliar with. We've also learned that bigger isn't necessarily better, which is why we've begun enforcing a new policy that requires at least one Wikipedian supporting every 15 students.

How are the issues of students' difficulties with Wikipedia's content policies such as no original research and plagiarism being addressed?

Our campus ambassadors have been taking on the responsibility of identifying what areas their assigned classes are struggling in and working to improve that to the best of their ability. We also have made various resources available on the Wikimedia Outreach website, designed with these students in mind. One resource you may have noticed that's actually been implemented at the Wikimedia Commons is the new image that appears when you're getting ready to upload an image, which serves to help students learn what's free and what's not. Campus ambassadors were informed about the plagiarism dangers when the risk was identified in India, and I'm happy to say that (at least in my own region), this has been effective. When we're working with science-related courses, there's a tendency for instructors to want to have their students publish their research in an article. We've been making sure this doesn't happen by suggesting the instructor have students do synthetic research around the topic they're researching and publish that instead.

So you're relying on focused direction from campus ambassadors and instructors to ensure students do not submit unencyclopaedic material?

Exactly. Without our volunteers, this program would fall through the floor! All of our regional, campus, and online ambassadors are volunteers. The paid staff don't usually come in contact with the students or the instructors.

Are there any other procedures in place or planned to monitor or curate student edits?

Each course has its own course page on the relevant Wikipedia. This course page includes the course syllabus and a list of everyone involved with that course-- instructors, ambassadors, and students. Each student is required to list any articles they are working on for their assignment. That way, it's easier for campus ambassadors and professors to review their articles. As an added bonus, the Wikipedia community can use these lists to find out what's being worked on as well.

Can you explain the criteria according to which campus and online ambassadors are selected, what training they receive, and what guidelines they operate under?

Online ambassador recruitment is something I haven't been involved with, but I can talk about campus ambassadors. Campus ambassadors submit an application to their regional ambassador, who interviews them if they seem qualified. A qualified campus ambassador would be someone who has some sort of experience teaching others, knows how to edit Wikipedia (or is capable of learning in a short period of time), has good communication skills, and is comfortable working in the academic environment. The training we provide them with shows them what they will be responsible for teaching students in the classroom, and offers tips on how to go about teaching these concepts. If the campus ambassador is unfamiliar with Wikipedia (and we take special care to make sure they are at least technologically competent enough to use Wikipedia), we introduce them to it and show them how to do the things they'll need to teach. Campus ambassadors are expected to take all responsibility for teaching students to edit Wikipedia. As we like to say, they "guide students through their first 100 edits". The idea here is that the professor shouldn't have to teach the students anything Wikipedia-related in order for the class to be successful. Campus ambassadors play a huge mentor role, and that's why the 1:15 ratio I mentioned earlier is important.

Specifically, what minimum standards of understanding Wikipedia's policies, guidelines and social norms are required of ambassadors?

Ambassadors are expected to respect the same guidelines that any respectable editor would respect. The folks we choose as campus ambassadors aren't your typical Wikipedia editor, though. We take care to make sure their social side is well-developed.

Are there guidelines or codes of conduct for ambassadors in particular?

We tell them that they're basically going to be the "face of Wikipedia" for the students they support, since these students have never met a Wikipedian before in most cases. However they present themselves is how the students are likely to view Wikipedia as a whole. We don't have any code of conduct that I'm aware of, but I've so far only worked with Americans and Canadians, where professionalism is pretty well-defined.

You mentioned requiring students to publicly list themselves and the articles they are working on for review. What role do ambassadors have in evaluating edits by students? Should they act as intermediaries between the students and regular editors, or allow the student submissions to be judged by the community directly?

The campus ambassadors take on a mentor-type role, offering pointers and help, but not fixing the actions of students. When conflict arises between a student and the community, the student is encouraged to stand up for him- or herself, and the campus ambassador will offer suggestions as needed. Also, the campus ambassadors are expected to review the edits of students and provide feedback on the edits. I usually tell my campus ambassadors to encourage students to find their niche in Wikipedia. If they're going to become a full-time editor, it won't happen by simply writing an essay.

So the ambassadors have a responsive role, coming to students' aid when needed but otherwise leaving them to navigate the project independently? The ambassadors' feedback is directed at the students, with the edits themselves to be handled by the editing community?

Yes. We want them to have the full experience any other Wikipedian would have. Plus some, of course.

Ambassadors don't act as intermediaries between students and other Wikipedians, rather they are guides.

Exactly. Teachers and guides.

Aside from education on best editing practices, what is the procedure for addressing problematic student contributions?

Depending on the level of the problem, the campus ambassador may be able to address it alone. However, sometimes there are bigger issues, like an article being deleted. When that happens, campus ambassadors are asked to get in touch with the instructor and the regional ambassador to discuss whether and how to resolve the issue.

Could you elaborate on the path of response on the encyclopaedia/community aspects of the problematic contributions?

Sorry, can you clarify your question?
Perhaps with an example.

Are regular editors expected to resolve the encyclopaedic impact of situations where students' contributions have been suboptimal? So, if a student adds originally-researched content to a medical article, for instance; who is tasked with addressing that?

If a regular editor finds it, it'll get deleted immediately. If a campus ambassador finds it, they warn the student of the consequences of this, with the hopes the student will correct it before someone else finds it.

'What procedures are in place to monitor ambassador performance, and how are issues with ambassadors' conduct addressed if they do arise?

If an ambassador isn't displaying optimal performance, I do what any manager would do: make it a point to discuss this with them and come up with some sort of way to improve the situation. If they're unresponsive, we ask them to step down from the role.

So the best way to address such issues is through the chain-of-command, if direct engagement with the ambassador in question is unsuccessful?

I'm not familiar with that terminology, but I'm not aware of a better way to address issues with individuals.

What is your brief as Education Program community liaison?

My role is to bridge the communication gap between the community of Wikipedia and the Education Program. In general, the staff at Wikimedia are usually not experienced Wikipedians, but are qualified in other ways (managerial, accounting, programming, etc). Following the recent discussions on the English Wikipedia, the Education Program staff have realized they aren't very effective in communicating with Wikipedians. That's why they've contracted me, an active Wikipedia contributor who happens to be very familiar with the Education Program. My support of the Education Program and my relations with the community are essential for someone communicating between the two parties.

The report by Tory Read on the India Education Program found that "the majority of problems that emerged during implementation could have been largely avoided by engaging the Wikipedia community as a partner in the pilot project planning process". How do you plan to change the culture of communication surrounding the eduction programs, to reach out to and encourage feedback from the community?

The changes you'll notice in the "culture" here are that the communication with other Wikipedians will actually be done by a Wikipedian rather than someone who doesn't really understand the ways Wikipedians communicate. I'll do my best to make myself available if there are questions or concerns, and if there is something that we can use the input of the community, I'll go out of my way to get that input from the community. For example, I'm hoping you've noticed at least one of the many notices I put out about the new MediaWiki extension that we're inviting the community to beta-test.

Sure, although there is a question hanging over the system of announcements from program organisers; to refer to the Read report again, the locations used for announcements were deemed ineffective and scattered. At the moment, announcements of initiatives relating to the English Wikipedia education programs are being posted separately at the different national project talkpages, as well as on various mailing lists, with much of the documentation and development taking place off-wiki (i.e. at outreach wiki/mediawiki). As these talkpages show, English Wikipedians have been largely unresponsive to these cross-postings lately. Is there any plan to consolidate these communications, for example using a newsletter or noticeboard, so as to facilitate focused discussion among English Wikipedians concerned with the education program? Read report: "Wikipedians recommend ... that each announcement include a link to planning documents and a central communications page on English Wikipedia". Is this being implemented?

There are so many platforms (mailing lists, noticeboards, village pumps, hundreds of talk pages) for communication among Wikipedians, and it's hard to find a combination of ten or twenty that all relevant Wikipedians use. I'm working on figuring out which platforms are effective for reaching the folks I need to reach out to. One of the goals in the next several months is to consolidate the program's pages so they're easier to navigate, with the hopes that this will also help centralize related discussions. We currently send out a newsletter that goes to people involved in the Education Program, but sending that same newsletter to interested Wikipedians sounds like a good idea. I'll make a note to talk to the appropriate person about that.

What do you think the most pressing issues for the education programs are in the coming year, in terms of community engagement and otherwise?

The current state of things is that Wikipedians don't trust the Education Program staff. If all goes well, my role as online communicator will complement any actions the Program makes. We've gotten into a sort of rut with the IEP, and hopefully this new style of communication will help us get back out as we plan for the second IEP pilot.

What would your message be to those editors who feel frustrated at the impact of the programs to date, who resent being asked to deal with the influx of student edits, or who are skeptical as to whether the programs are worth continuing?

Our attention is increasingly shifting from numbers to quality. We're taking preventative measures as we gear up for the coming semester. Classes will be smaller. Experienced Wikipedians will be required in every classroom. Also, keep in mind the influx of new editors also means in influx in experienced editors, since many students end up liking to edit Wikipedia. That's where experienced editors are born.

So one of the things both the program organisers and the community learned from the pilot program was that which courses are selected for inclusion in the programs, and especially how large and well-supported they are, is an important predictor of success. Can you outline the main learnings on this point?

We've found that larger courses became more difficult for campus ambassadors and instructors to effectively manage. After all, it's a lot of work to review an article, especially for someone new to Wikipedia. As a result, and per input from the community, we decided on a set of guidelines for course selection. Those guidelines have been in effect since the beginning of 2012 and can be found at outreach:Wikipedia Education Program/Participation Requirements. To highlight a few of these, we're requiring experienced Wikipedians to be in the classroom, and we're imposing a limit on the number of students allowed in a course. As the class gets larger, more ambassadors are required. For every 15 students, at least one ambassador is required.

What impact do program organisers hope the revised participation requirements to have?

We're hoping that we see higher quality in student contributions.

The Wikimedia Foundation is also developing a software extension to facilitate the education program. What motivated this and how is the extension intended to help?

To date, anyone participating in the program has been dealing with an interface that's hard to navigate and seems to require a lot more effort to maintain than it's worth. For instance, instructors who have never used Wikipedia have been expected to use macro-style templates that the average experienced Wikipedian might have difficulties figuring out. You can see an example of what we've been using at WP:United States Education Program/Courses/Present. As a result of the difficult-to-use interface, important details are often omitted, like what articles are included in a class, and sometimes a class might not find its way to the directory in the first place. The MediaWiki developers have been working on solving this problem for us by developing a new extension for MediaWiki, specifically designed to function as a sort of database software for managing the Education Program data. I've been testing it out this month and it's a very slick piece of art; it'll really simplify things.

As we wrap up, do you have anything to say to readers interested in learning more about or engaging with the Education Program?

I do want to emphasize that my presence online doesn't mean the staff won't be online. They'll still be available to the community, and even helping make sure things don't slip past my attention. Also, the pilot programs in Brazil and Cairo have been modeled after what we've learned from the first pilot in India. We absolutely can't have the same problems happen again. As we enter the second India Pilot, we will not proceed without input from the Wikipedian community. The staff is committed to correcting their mistakes and doing better next time.
If you'd like to have a Wikipedia Education Program course at your institution, let us know!

Rob Shnautz, thank you very much for speaking with The Signpost.

My pleasure, thanks.


Reader comments

2012-03-12

Women's history, what we're missing, and why it matters

Sarah Stierch holds a Wikimedia Foundation community fellowship for the encouragement of women's participation in Wikimedia projects. In this report she addresses – in conversation with four interested interlocutors – the topic of Women's History Month, why it should matter to Wikipedians, what the project loses in the gender gap, and what's to be done about it.

The views expressed are those of the author and interviewees only, and do not necessarily represent those of The Signpost or its staff.


We can make Wikipedia a greater resource for women's history.

March is Women's History Month, a time for people around the world to celebrate women's history. While I believe every day should be women's history day, I also feel we should take advantage of the month of March to bring awareness to the lack of coverage about women's history on Wikipedia, and concerns about the gender gap in Wikipedia: only 9% of our active contributors are women. To mark Women's History Month, WikiWomen's History Month has been planned and events are taking place around the world in the Wikimedia movement to promote improving women's history on Wikipedia and inspire women to get involved in our projects.

As a Wikimedia Foundation community fellow, who is focusing on the gender gap, I wanted to learn more about what Wikipedians and Wikimedia supporters thought about the importance of women's voices being represented in the encyclopaedia. I spoke with three Wikipedians:

I also spoke with Valerie Aurora, co-founder of The Ada Initiative, a non-profit organization that supports women in open technology and culture.

Why is it important to improve Wikipedia's coverage of women's history? Why do you feel it's important for more women to contribute to Wikipedia?

  • Jgmikulay: Wikipedia is a gateway to knowledge for millions of people. It's important that women be involved in the construction of that knowledge. Also, as the encyclopedia continues to struggle for legitimacy in places like academia or cultural fields, it needs to become more representative.
  • Kippelboy: One of the five pillars of Wikipedia says " Wikipedia is written from a neutral point of view". If we strive for articles that document and explain the major points of view in a balanced and impartial manner, we need women to be represented in this project.
  • Whiteghost.ink: Women's history and women in history had been left out of the story for a long time in academia and literature and eventually a big effort had to be made to redress that before any interpretation of their contributions could be made. This was an historiographical problem. In the case of Wikipedia, interpretation is not relevant, but information is. Since now people are using Wikipedia as a source to get started on understanding things, having the perspective and "voice" of 50% of the population missing is equivalent to what happened before. That is, it doesn't help provide a true or balanced account of things if all this is missing and when interpretation (which may initially be built on a Wikipedia search) does happen, the interpretation is actually skewed. A new historiographical problem.
  • Valerie Aurora: Every person brings their own personal experience and knowledge to Wikipedia. What we know depends on who we are and the life we lead. Women have important and unique knowledge that is difficult to come by any other way. Losing the contributions of half the human race is against the fundamental principle of Wikipedia: free access to the sum of human knowledge.

Is anything missing from Wikipedia due to the lack of female participation? If so, what do you think is missing and how can that void be filled?

  • Jgmikulay: Many women have collaborative leadership styles that would be beneficial to the encyclopedia. The combative culture that prevails currently is a huge turn-off.
  • Whiteghost.ink: In my opinion, every organisation needs both sexes working together—the one balances out the other. All men together get terribly competitive and task focused and are highly likely to miss things in the rush to succeed. All women together are highly likely to start criticising each other and miss opportunities to succeed. These are generalisations, I know, but we need each other. And, even more difficult, we need to respect each others' approaches.
  • Valerie Aurora: The depth (or existence of) coverage of topics on Wikipedia is highly skewed by its contributor base in two ways. First, a contributor has to be interested enough in a topic to write an article about it, without being so interested in the topic as to have a conflict of interest. Second, if someone else notices an article they don't like, they can make a request for deletion, which is then voted on. Right now on English Wikipedia, about 90% of the people writing and voting on articles are men. This is how you end up with the absurdity of arguing whether a woman scientist is notable enough to deserve a Wikipedia article at the same time that women starring in pornography [who win a pornographic award] are automatically considered notable.

What type of subject matter would you like to see covered better on Wikipedia in relation to women's history?

  • Jgmikulay: Biographical articles on women in the art world, including artists, designers, curators, art historians and art administrators.
  • Whiteghost.ink: We need integrated women's perspectives in ordinary articles, just like we need integrated global perspectives. This is harder than including global perspectives because often an article will separate out different national perspectives in a list—for example, the use of a food type in different countries. We do not want that in articles vis-à-vis men's and women's perspectives. For example, on the whole, we don't want the article to say "men think this" and "women think that". My point is that integration is harder than lists like this and requires nuanced writing.
  • Valerie Aurora: Biographies of women, past and present, in any area. A recent study showed that while Wikipedia had more biographies of women overall, it was more likely to lack biographies of notable women than notable men. One of the ways to justify prejudice against women is to say, "There are no women X," where X is mathematicians, musicians, explorers, authors, etc. In reality, often many women have struggled through the barriers set up to prevent them from achieving their dreams, only to be forgotten, ignored, and dismissed. Write a biography of a woman today!

Will you be doing anything special related to women's history month and Wikipedia?

  • Jgmikulay: I'll be introducing about 25 women students at Alverno College to editing the encyclopedia.
  • Kippelboy: Yes, we are organizing an Edit-a-thon on March 24 at Figueres for improving the article of Àngels Santos Torroella. She is a 100 year old living surrealist painter badly represented in Spanish, Catalan and English Wikipedias.
  • Whiteghost.ink: There are various things connecting GLAM and Women's History Month that are "on the go" here down under.
  • Valerie Aurora: I'll be going to a local WikiWomen's History Month event in San Francisco at the Wikimedia Foundation and writing or updating women's biographies.

I believe these responses provide unique insight into the need for better women's coverage and women's participation in Wikipedia. I hope through this brief sharing of thoughts, you will have gained a deeper understanding of where women's history lies in Wikipedia, and the need for improvement about all areas related to women's history.

Want to be involved in WikiWomen's History Month? Learn more about an event in your city, or an online event through WikiProjects at the WikiWomen's History Month page. And be bold—think of the representation in the subjects that you contribute to on Wikipedia and related projects: how can you make Wikipedia a place to celebrate your heritage, the heritage of the women in your lives, and the heritage of all the world's knowledge.

Do you have an issue you think the community should be informed about but isn't? Pitch your proposals for features to The Signpost's editors in the newsroom.

Reader comments

2012-03-12

A look at new arbitrators

The Arbitration Committee is not a monolithic entity, but functions as a collective of individual editors serving as arbitrators. For the community to understand the important work the committee performs, it's important to understand the motivations and ideals of each individual arbitrator. Evaluating our newest arbitrators is the first step in such a process; each election brings new editors with different philosophies and ideas on how to make the work of the committee more efficient and effective.

On 1 January 2012, the English Wikipedia community elected four new arbitrators to serve on the committee. Our new Signpost series analyzing the work of arbitrators begins with a review of what each new member brings to our encyclopedia's most well-known body.

Related articles
Arbitration analysis

AGK

AGK has had a long tenure in Wikipedia Dispute Resolution. He was appointed to the Mediation Committee in May 2007, and continued to serve into 2010 when he was elected its chair by his fellow mediators. In addition to that experience in directly handling disputes between editors, he held a community seat on the Audit Subcommittee before his election to the full committee. With this background, it's interesting to see how he has reacted to the pressure-cooker environment that is ArbCom.

AGK was tasked with drafting a proposed decision in the contentious Muhammad images case. In that proposal, he introduced several new ideas for principles, as he indicated he would in his election statement. He proposed everything from the fetishisation of policy to specific principles regarding the uncensored nature of Wikipedia. AGK says that he "takes a harder line on principles than my colleagues do". He notes his disapproval of "banal restatements of simple policy", instead preferring principles that "demonstrate the committee's thinking in relation to the dispute [at hand]".

The proposed decision process in Muhammad images is unique in another regard – the posting of a summary of the dispute as a means to initiate new discussion on the workshop page itself. This move was "unprecedented", but received "a good response, especially to the mere fact [it] was posted". In AGK's mind, this avoided the sense that the committee's decision "appeared out of thin air [to] 'show our working'".

In light of the fact that AGK drafted the proposed decision by himself, it's interesting to see how he evaluates cases: "I use the evidence page to evaluate conduct issues with specific editors, and to get a feel for what the disputants view as the issues in a case ... we try to look beyond the question of 'who has thrown the most tantrums' to 'why is this dispute not resolved, and what can be done to bring it to a close'." He stresses that this deeper-looking inquiry is sometimes difficult on more technical cases, but that it held true for the decision he had to draft.

We can do more [than] slap wrists ... we can give useful advice for resolving disagreements about content.

—AGK

It's clear from an analysis of the cases that AGK has worked on, and his method of voting on cases, that he takes a view of cases as important for the long-term guidance for the community. His proposition of asking the community to handle content disputes, as a direct request from the committee, supports the idea that he will continue to use a bottom-up approach in future cases. This indicates that AGK may be likely to focus on how to help a conflict rather than trying to craft a decision around the sanction of specific editors: "we can do more [than] slap wrists ... we can give useful advice for resolving disagreements about content."

Courcelles

Courcelles opened his candidacy statement in the December election with the proclamation "editors that care about this project deserve an ArbCom that is available, active, and experienced". To that end, he submitted his name for consideration. Before his election to ArbCom, Courcelles served on the Audit Subcommittee and was confirmed as a permanent checkuser and oversighter. He has listed as his most important focus the content of Wikipedia, citing his contributions to 23 featured lists and assistance in the improvement of two featured articles. Thus, Courcelles' take on work on the Arbitration Committee is unique.

Within three months, Courcelles has already made a mark on committee decisions. In TimidGuy, his analysis of whether to ban an editor or merely to remove administrative privileges was found sufficiently compelling for his colleagues to approve his proposal to ban then-admin Will Beback. As Courcelles explained, "A mere desysop here exemplifies the 'Super Mario Problem' where editors with no advanced permissions get banned, and those with such permissions merely get them taken away. This is unacceptable, and the conduct here is so bad that it, in my mind, calls for this."

Along with Courcelles' discussions of remedies, a visible trend in his participation in decision debates has been an attempt to clarify principles and findings of fact when voting on them. For instance, in the Civility enforcement case, Courcelles told fellow arbitrators that "the expectation isn't, in my mind, so much that every editor has to raise the level from the comment before theirs, but that behaviour that actively lowers the discussion towards mud-slinging is not acceptable". This may be a sign that Courcelles will strive to find balanced and equitable principles when evaluating disputes and deciding cases.


Arbitration Committee
2012 Term Cases

Hersfold

Hersfold is the only newly elected arbitrator who can't be considered entirely new: he served on the committee for the first five months of 2010, before his real-life workload forced him to give up those responsibilities. However, he promised during the December election to "fully dedicate [his] time to ArbCom" – a promise that has been fulfilled with his active participation on all recent cases.

His most recent activity was on the Civility enforcement case. During the debate on the proposed decision, Hersfold held to a steadfast view that a harsh remedy was required, declaring that "an editor who thinks such behavior is acceptable is incompatible with this project". While this position was bounded to the case at hand, this may suggest a trend in the way Hersfold approaches cases. Hersfold himself says "usually [I'll] stand my ground on an issue until it's clearly demonstrated I'm in the wrong". But of course, he recognizes that with the diversity of the arbitrators, "there's always some disagreement".

As to the way he thinks through a case, Hersfold explains that "it helps to build a bit of a timeline from the evidence; ... to find a truly effective solution, we have to consider the full background of the dispute and involved editors". In a slightly contrasting view from that of new arbitrator AGK, Hersfold says that principles "really just fall into place on their own ... [they] echo the expected conduct that wasn't followed, and findings summarize the time timeline built from the evidence". His goal is always to work through that timeline of the conflict as a means of seeing which editors have been acting inappropriately. In this way, a future analysis of cases could suggest that Hersfold uses cases as a means to sanction unruly editors rather than as a basis for broad principle-building.

SilkTork

SilkTork announced in his statement for candidacy in the December elections that he would view ArbCom cases "holistically", to "see the relationship between the parts that make up the whole, which sometimes gives a new perspective". While SilkTork did not serve on any special committee or hold any functionary position before his election, he had been an active Wikipedian administrator with work on two featured articles and a collection of nearly 20 good articles.

In one of the year's new cases, Betacommand 3, SilkTork was very active in trying to craft a remedy that was explicit in its terms and balanced in its nature. On the proposed decision page, a great effort was made to keep Betacommand on the project with the imposition of strong restrictions, rather than a ban. When the committee moved to ban the editor, SilkTork joined five other arbitrators to oppose. He noted that "if one doesn't agree [with a proposal], that can be awkward. I hadn't expected that". Despite this occasional element of disagreement, SilkTork emphasized that "the cases we accept are complex ... if one does disagree with the decision the drafter has taken, then we have the option of further discussion".

For SilkTork, the distinction in remedies relies a great deal on sifting through the evidence. As an example, he notes that in the TimidGuy case "my initial impression was that Will Beback had been over-enthusiastic but well meaning...[but] reading the evidence...a ban was a reasonable outcome, and that's what I agreed with." This emphasis on the evidence phase creates a need for SilkTork to investigate the patterns of conflict in a case: "I will read something in the workshop, and this may lead me to investigate a particular bit of edit history...what is common is to have several Firefox tabs open at the same time, and this may be 20 or 30 tabs".

This will last, and these early days will be remembered.

—SilkTork

Analysis of SilkTork's activity reveals not only a fact-driven case-handling method, but also sheds light on his feelings on the role of the Arbitration Committee in the context of the broader community. He was hesitant to support a principle that "In certain circumstances, the Committee may overturn or reduce a sanction imposed by the community." However, as the arbitrator himself explained, "I feel that the current Committee is very aware of ArbCom's relationship with the community and that we act within policy and not above it".

Despite holding the very focused role of arbitrator (which he notes is a very tiring job), SilkTork remains very passionate about the project for the value it has in and of itself. "This will last", he says, "and these early days will be remembered."

Moving forward

The Arbitration Committee conducts its work with an eye towards the sustainability of the project as a whole. The decisions it crafts are reviewed in meticulous detail to ensure that the standards announced by that small group of editors will be an effective guide for the rest of the encyclopedia. Yet in crafting a decision, each individual arbitrator has their own ideals, principles, and even methods of analyzing a case. These are distinctions with a difference, and fully understanding that fact will serve to foster greater understanding of the committee as a whole.

The Signpost would like to thank all the arbitrators who responded to the interview questions; full responses can be found here. If you have a suggestion for a future 'Arbitration analysis' article, feel free to drop a note on the writer's talk page.

Reader comments

2012-03-12

Sue Gardner tackles the funds, and the terms of use update nears implementation

Controversial content debates resumed

The far-reaching controversial content debate of 2010–2011 was resumed on March 1, 2012, when MZMcBride asked about the current state of the image filter software on foundation-l. Two Foundation trustees, Phoebe Ayers and Kat Walsh, declared during the subsequent discussion that in retrospect they felt it was wrong to adopt the controversial content resolution approved in May 2011 ( Signpost coverage) and that the board was still split over the issue.

It was confirmed that the development of the tool called the personal image filter and subject to a global survey in August 2011 ( Signpost coverage) has not yet started, and Walsh explicitly supported "rescinding" at least parts of the underlying board decision.

The controversial debate on the Foundation mailing list was wide-ranging, encompassing the re-iteration of well-known positions on the socio-cultural aspects of how the issue relates to the current chapter-selection process of two WMF board members as well as a new proposal on Commons aiming to improve image searching.

The debate arose in response to a FoxNews.com story at the end of February 2012, and quickly spread beyond Wikimedia. Larry Sanger, co-founder of Wikipedia, joined in on March 7 on his blog, saying that the problems he reported in a letter to the FBI in 2010 ( Signpost coverage) were still unresolved and urging the WMF to ignore community opposition and institute editorial controls. Discussion on the matter also took place at Wikipedia Review.

There is currently an open proposal before the board to vote on whether to uphold the original request for an image-hiding feature. The executive director, Sue Gardner, will take direction from the board on the matter. However, Ayers stated that the issue is off the table for now, "due to the more time-sensitive and generally all-consuming financial discussions of the past couple of months."

Final Gardner recommendations published

On March 9, WMF executive director Sue Gardner presented to the board her final recommendations on fundraising and the dissemination of those funds.

A steady stream of finance-related position papers and posts from Wikimedia entities on Meta peaked on Sunday with Sue Gardner's release of her final recommendations on how to reform major fundraising and fund distribution activities, which were presented to the board on March 9.

With regard to fund distribution, the recommendations are that the decision-making process concerning how to arrange WMF non-core activities, as well as funds to be received by other Wikimedia entities (such as chapters) and individual volunteers, should be opened up to community participation.

According to the office hours conducted on March 12, it's not yet clear what "core" means in concrete terms. Gardner provided a general definition, stating that "Core does not mean 'the rock-bottom costs of operating the sites if we were in serious financial difficulties.' Core means the costs of operating the sites."

To better facilitate a community involvement, the Foundation would establish a new body, run by volunteers and called the Funds Dissemination Committee (FDC), to advise the board on how to distribute funds raised via projects such as the English Wikipedia. The committee would be supported by Foundation staff, and a body of funds would be excluded from the FDC as an "operating reserve" to ensure smooth sailing for the Foundation in case of future financial difficulties.

On fundraising, Gardner recommends that the WMF process all funds received through its project sites according to nine guiding principles, including transparency, efficiency, and accordance with the movement mission. These principles—taken from a 2011 board resolution—would be applied to all fundraising activities regardless of area of activity. Fundraising recommendation 3 represents a shift from the draft version, allowing for the continuation of chapter activities during the annual fundraiser on a case by case basis.

Gardner's text follows other Wikimedia entity position papers and posts on Meta over the last weeks. All four chapters that currently process payments, ( France, Germany, Switzerland, and the UK), posted their positions on the issues over the last week, reaffirming their preference for processing funds as national entities.

This was the second round of chapter position papers this year, following a January–February rush where the German chapter published a paper, which was reviewed by an association of editors of the Catalan Wikipedia and its sister project ( Amical Viquipèdia), arguing in favor of national chapter-driven processing. The Italy and UK chapters followed shortly after with statements of their own, as did the Regional Cooperation Initiative for Ibero-America ( Iberocoop).

The next stage will consist of deliberations within the board, which is expected to make a decision at the Berlin conference at the end of March. Everyone interested in contributing at this point can post notes and positions at the related discussion page.

Terms of use update

A board resolution formally approving the forthcoming update of the terms of use was published on March 6. The vote wraps up a deliberation process under way since September 2011, when the Foundation legal team presented an initial draft for community deliberation. Subsequent community debate made this the most heavily collaborated terms of use of any major website. The move aims to make roles and rules more transparent to new editors, as well as bringing the terms in line with those of other websites, such as Mozilla and Creative Commons, in increasing legal protections for the Foundation.

The text was modified more than 200 times during the community review proceedings, which ended in December 2011, and embodies a major shift in the nature of the terms of use. The current version is essentially an agreement on licensing, while its replacement is designed to be more comprehensive and transparent on several issues.

While licensing provisions have been preserved, the updated version includes new aspects like a community-formulated global ban for cross-wiki violations on the project sites, as well as clarifications on topics like legal protection, community responsibilities, and roles. The update summary in the communication sent to the Board of Trustees by general counsel Geoff Brigham has been posted on Meta.

The updated terms of use will not officially go into effect until after a formal notice period, to be decided upon by the Foundation's legal department, but expected to last at least 30 days.

Brief notes

New mockup for "list" view for New Page Triage
  • Core Contest revival: Well-known English Wikipedian Casliber has revived the Core Contest concept, originally run in November and December 2007 by Danny. The new contest aims to cause a "flash mob" of improvements to lackluster vital articles in the form of "a short, sharp snappy three week contest with some Amazon vouchers or some such as prizes." It will run from 00:01 March 10 to 23:59 March 31 Sydney time, and after a two-week judging period the editors with the most impressive improvements will receive vouchers as their rewards.
  • New Page Triage initiative progresses: The talkpage of the New Page Triage project this week saw candid discussion of the initiative's relationship with the Wikimedia Foundation from Oliver Keyes, the foundation's community liaison for product development. Keyes sought input at the Administrators noticeboard and is publishing a regular newsletter on the initiative's progress; so far, over 80 editors have signed-up.
  • Article Feedback Tool: With Version 5 deployment and development ongoing, discussion continues on the project's talk page. Inviting comments on its current plans, the Foundation has asked about unaddressed community concerns as well as potential design ideas and improvements. A Foundation newsletter on the topic has also been created. Stay tuned to The Signpost in the coming weeks for a comprehensive report on the progress of New Page Triage, the Article Feedback Tool, and other momentous engineering developments.
  • Teahouse builds steam: Metrics for the Teahouse's first week reveal that "the overall count isn't that impressive yet, but in general we're seeing a steady acceleration in the number of newbies per day." Those wishing to follow the initiative more closely may wish to sign up for its newsletter.
    The Foundation's monthly metrics meeting, conducted on March 1, for the month of February.
  • Monthly report released: The Foundation has released its monthly report for February. Highlights include the creation of the Legal and Community Advocacy department, the Teahouse project launch, and the deployment of MediaWiki 1.19. Following the precedent set by last month's report, the foundation has recorded and released its monthly metrics video, and the report has been translated into several languages.
  • Death of an editor: The death of senior Wikipedian Dr. Steven Rubenstein – known to fellow editors as Slrubenstein – was announced at the administrators' noticeboard on Saturday last. Dr Rubenstein was the Director of the Research Institute of Latin American Studies at University of Liverpool's school of Cultures, Languages and Area Studies. Following the guidelines for deceased Wikipedians, his account's administrator privileges were revoked, and an entry is expected to be added at Wikipedia:Deceased Wikipedians once details have been confirmed.
  • Bangla Wikipedia Unconference 2012: Images from the Bangla Wikipedia Unconference 2012 in Chittagong have been uploaded to Commons. The event, hosted by the Independent University Bangladesh, was supported by Wikimedia Bangladesh and attended by more than 300 people, including the State Minister for Science and Technology – who urged the nation's youth to edit Bangla Wikipedia – and intellectuals such as Muhammad Zafar Iqbal.
  • Wikidata: Wikimedia Deutschland's new community communications manager for Wikidata, Lydia Pintscher, has introduced the communications road map for the project, the goal of which is "to create something similar to Wiki[media] Commons for data", starting with an interwiki repository. The initiative's current focus is on collecting input, creating resources "to explain the project better", setting up infrastructure, and working on a structured input collection system. (Those excited by the potential of the project will be interested to know that the Signpost will be running a special report in April, covering the topic in more detail.)
  • Chapters Committee appointments completed: The Chapters Committee has announced the end of its elections and the appointment of five new members. Galileo Vidoni, Lodewijk Gelauff, Maria Sefidari, Bengt Oberger, and Tomasz Kozłowski are replacing outgoing members Nathan Carter, Austin Hair, and Vladimir Medeyko; in addition, Delphine Ménard has been appointed as a non-voting adviser.
  • Wikimania 2012 call for participation deadline on Sunday: March 18 is the deadline for submitting a talk, panel, workshop or other session proposal for Wikimania 2012. The organizing team is seeking session proposals on wiki culture and community, technical topics, sister projects, third-party wikis and collaborative projects, wikis in the public sector, GLAM-wiki, education initiatives, and other topics related to Wikipedia.
  • Milestones: The following Wikipedia projects reached milestones this week: the Vietnamese Wikipedia has reached 1,000,000 total pages, the Finnish Wikipedia has reached 50 administrators, and the Sorani Wikipedia has reached 100,000 page edits.

    Reader comments

2012-03-12

Britannica runs out of print as Jimmy Wales anointed UK transparency tsar

End of an era as Britannica ceases print

An increasingly rare sight: bookshelves stocked with the Fifteenth Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2002

In an announcement fittingly made through a blog post on its website, the management of the Encyclopaedia Britannica revealed that the longest-published English language encyclopedia in the history of the world would cease its print edition after 244 years. The encyclopaedia is far from over, with approximately half a million household subscribers to its $70 per annum digital edition, which surpassed print as the company's primary revenue source in 2006 (and will be free to access from Britannica.com for a week-long trial to mark the occasion), but the announcement marks the end of an era in knowledge curation and dissemination.

In The New York Times, Julie Bosman waxed lyrical about the totemic power the books once possessed: "In the 1950s, having the Encyclopaedia Britannica on the bookshelf was akin to a station wagon in the garage or a black-and-white Zenith in the den, a possession coveted for its usefulness and as a goalpost for an aspirational middle class." She highlighted that "only 8,000 sets of the 2010 edition have been sold", a paltry amount in comparison to the 120,000 sets sold in the United States in one year two decades before. The Daily Telegraph lamented "The sad death of the Encyclopaedia Britannica", the Vancouver Sun gave a nostalgic retrospective – as did The Independent – CNN made the case for "Why Encyclopaedia Britannica mattered" (citing concerns that the Internet could be disabled by Chinese hackers) and Los Angeles Times, NPR, The Guardian and the Wall Street Journal also contributed their post-mortems.

The comprehensiveness, diversity and timeliness of web content, particularly that of Wikipedia, was widely cited as the nail in the coffin. Poynter highlighted the speed and intensity with which Wikipedia editors had responded to the development in the crowdsourced encyclopaedia's own article on the subject, with TIME asking "is Wikipedia our new lord and master?", a prospect at which the Daily Mail fretted, declaring that Britannica's heir "encourages only the most blinkered voyage of discovery".

Jimmy Wales, who remarked of the reference work in a 2004 interview that "I would view them as a competitor, except that I think they will be crushed out of existence within 5 years", highlighted the dissent of Dan Lewis from the consensus pointing the finger of blame for Britannica's demise at Wikipedia, arguing that it was Microsoft Encarta, a CD-based competitor that rose to prominence in the 1990s, that first heralded its change in fortunes.

"The Sum of Knowledge": 1913 advertisement for the celebrated Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, which provided the seed for many Wikipedia articles

Although he had warm words for his erstwhile colleagues, former Britannica.com editor Charlie Madigan blasted the corporate management of the venerable institution for what he saw as their questionable ethics and narrow, profit-driven focus in recent years. Calling the abandonment of its print edition "inevitable", he expressed his disenchantment with the enterprise and his involvement with it: "I had high hopes for the idea of giving away knowledge. Unfortunately, that wasn’t what it was about. It was all about monetizing information and selling the Britannica brand." As part of a roundup at The New York Times – another print institution struggling to come to terms with the digital era – Wikimedia Foundation trustee and Signpost alumna Phoebe Ayers had this to say:

Jimbo Wales: tsar of transparency

Jimmy Wales, the arch-Wikipedian whom the British government hopes will show them the light on innovation and transparency.

The Daily Telegraph revealed this week that Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales was to advise the British government in an unpaid advisory capacity on improving innovation and transparency. The announcement came (appropriately) via tweet from the South by Southwest festival, and was quickly picked up in the national and Internet tech press, with stories in Financial Times The Daily Mail, Computer World UK, TechWeekEurope, Information Age, Public Service, and Business Insider.

The announcement came a week after Wales had given the opening presentation at the Financial Times digital media conference in London. His activities at the conference included disavowing that the Wikimedia Foundation would be adopting a more overtly political footing following the SOPA wars (as Betabeat asked "Why Isn’t Wikipedia Blacking Out Over ACTA?"), advising journalists to avoid citing Wikipedia, warning that for the encyclopaedia to collaborate with Facebook would compromise the essentially private nature of its consultation, and cautioning that the secret of socially mediated content dissemination remained elusive.

The remit of Wales' new advisory role includes all government departments, though his audience will be bureaucrats rather than their political masters. Despite this, the International Business Times interpreted the move as Wales' grand entrance into politics (perhaps forgivably overlooking the burgeoning Draft Jimmy Wales for Senate movement). Andrew Orlowski of The Register speculated that the appointment "may prove to be a political gift" to the opposition Labour Party, describing it as "rather like putting foxes in charge of hen security" in light of the opacity of Wikipedia's internal bureaucracy, which Orlowski characterised as dominated by ideologically motivated pseudonymous apparatchiks. Techeye meanwhile wondered whether Wales would take to doling out " Malcolm Tucker-style grillings" to the civil servants.

WebProNews contributor Shawn Hess, having sifted through Twitter reactions to the announcement, remarked "Sounds to me like Wales is a welcome addition. It definately [ sic] helps to have an experienced entreprenuar [ sic] of his caliber onboard. I can’t wait to see what change he can bring about. When the public can be heard before legislation is passed, things are bound to change for the better." His colleague Jonathan Fisher couldn't resist the opportunity to snark that Wales was planning to "present all advice in the form of "Personal Appeal" banner ads":

It was a bumper week for Wales, after VentureBeat had reported that his for-profit wiki-empire Wikia had overtaken competitor IGN in the Comscore rankings to become the largest network of gaming sites in the world, accruing 26 million pageviews per month.

Unparliamentary conduct as MPs bios scrubbed

Wikimedia UK chief executive Jon Davies, who took advantage of the revelations about edits from parliament to launch a mischievous outreach effort to recruit MPs as editors

An analysis conducted by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism has found evidence of thousands of edits to Wikipedia originating from within the British Houses of Parliament. The edits were found through tracking the contributions of two IP addresses, 194.60.38.198 ( talk · contribs · WHOIS) and 194.60.38.10 ( talk · contribs · WHOIS), which route the traffic from users of the Parliamentary network. Among the findings were that the articles on almost one out of every six Members of Parliament (MPs) had been edited by users of the network, and that in many cases, these changes were attempts at ameliorating negative biographical content concerning the 2009 United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal. The Bureau singled out the entry on Joan Ryan (a parliamentarian who resigned in the wake of the affair) as having been successfully scrubbed of any mention of expenses-related wrongdoing; Wikipedians have since updated it with details of both the scandal and the attempted cover-up. The Bureau also found plenty of innocuous edits, including the listing of a sitting MP as a notable DJ, finessing of a passage discussing the relative merits of characterising Pringles as crisps or cakes, and the correction of a misstatement of the full name of a former Mayor of London as "Kenneth Robert Livingstone Twatface".

The news caught the attention of the mainstream media, with reports in The Independent, The Daily Telegraph, and The Daily Mail. Contacted for comment, chief executive of Wikimedia UK Jon Davies drily remarked that "We would welcome any MPs who want to become editors".

Meanwhile, the BBC recounted new political forecasting techniques developed by Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher Peter Gloor using analyses of social media including Wikipedia edits. Gloor and his team followed the activities of the small group of highly active Wikipedians, their levels of respect and areas of focus. The methodology was used to successfully predict the outcome of Republican Party presidential primaries in the United States, and has been incorporated by The Huffington Post's election tracker. British parliamentarians may want to take note.

In brief

  • Go, GoDaddy, go: The Wikimedia Foundation's decision to sever ties with registrar GoDaddy in the wake of the SOPA wars (see "Technology report") caught the eye of CNET News and Techcrunch. Redditors, who had been pushing strongly for the move, even going so far as to promise donations if GoDaddy was dumped, reacted favourably.
  • Brand value: The Brisbane Times reports that Australian web users prefer Wikipedia over social networking sites for brand information—news that may well encourage opportunists to inundate the encyclopaedia with yet more self-promotion and hagiography.
  • Revenge by defamation?: Ars Technica reports on a defamation case in which a former employee is sued for making unflattering alterations to a company's Wikipedia article. In the writer's opinion, in determining damages the judge should consider how long the alleged defamatory material remained before it was reverted and how many page views occurred in the meantime.
  • The sum of all plagiarism: Webpronews staff writer Jonathan Fisher had a note of gallows optimism about the Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program: "Long derided by professors as an inaccurate and unacademic information source, Wikipedia might be able to garner a degree of academic respect (see what I did there?) if the program meets with continued success. At the very least, the students of tomorrow might be plagiarizing better-informed content." For in-depth coverage of the program, see The Signpost's incipient Education report.

    Reader comments

2012-03-12

Nothing changes as long discussions continue


In brief
Discussions of note
Discussions covered in the main body of the discussion report are not listed here.

Editor's note: As I've been away most of the week, we will present a different take on the discussion report this edition. Below is an analysis of the dispute resolution and discussion system that we have, looking at the advantages and the disadvantages.

Where the discussions are


The process today

The English Wikipedia is in some ways becoming better at dealing with issues, with the creation of more and more specialized dispute resolution forums and centralized discussion areas. Areas where topics are being discussed include the village pump, centralized discussion, and the community portal; a watchlist notice is also being used to draw editors' notice. Without a doubt, there are plenty of ways to get the attention of editors who may be interested in discussion.

On the other hand, with the proliferation of these specialized forums and areas, it becomes increasingly difficult for editors to find discussions that may be relevant to them, and to ensure their opinion is heard, because of the large number of pages that need to be checked.

It also seems that it's taking longer for disputes to be resolved and discussions to be closed. Perhaps, because of the double-sided process that we have, the discussions drag out because there are so many options to consider.

In brief

2012-03-12

WikiProject Women's History

WikiProject news
News in brief
Submit your project's news and announcements for next week's WikiProject Report at the Signpost's WikiProject Desk.
Clio, the muse of history
We Can Do It! poster from World War II
Betty Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique

This week, we interviewed WikiProject Women's History, which celebrated its first birthday last month. Despite the project's youth, it has assembled a collection of 82 pieces of Featured content, over 100 Good Articles, and two task forces dealing with women in World War I and women and technology. In honor of Women's History Month, the project has started a month-long drive involving collaborations between several WikiProjects, with real-life meetups scheduled in cities around the globe. We interviewed Penny Richards, OttawaAC, SarahStierch, and Ipigott.

What motivated you to join WikiProject Women's History? Have you been involved in any other projects related to history or gender studies?

Penny Richards: I'm a research scholar with UCLA's Center for the Study of Women, and I've worked on editorial boards for several print encyclopedias, mostly contributing articles about women. This project just seemed like a good opportunity to learn more about how to contribute to Wikipedia.
OttawaAC: I started editing after reading some newspaper interviews given by Sue Gardner and Jimmy Wales where they mentioned the gender gap among Wikipedia editors, and discussed some research that had shown a relative lack of articles focused on women's issues in general. It occurred to me that a lot of young people who routinely use Wikipedia might jump to the conclusion that if a topic isn't already covered in Wikipedia, that it must not be important at all—that is a scary possibility as far as I'm concerned. I have an undergraduate honours degree in History and had studied approaches to researching people and events that have been largely left out of conventional history books, such as women, blue collar workers, and so on, so reading those interviews piqued my interest whereas I hadn't previously given any thought to writing Wikipedia articles myself.
SarahStierch: I joined WikiProject Women's History after working on biographies for the National Women's History Project, which I stumbled across through my involvement in WikiProject Feminism. I enjoy writing biographies and many happen to be about women, so it only seemed natural to join!

WikiProject Women's History is home to 79 pieces of Featured material and over 100 Good Articles. Have you contributed to any of these articles? What are some challenges editors face when improving articles about women's history to FA or GA status?

SarahStierch: I rewrote and expanded Louise Nevelson, and with the help of other users it was awarded GA status. This is one of two GAs I've ever had (the other is about male artist Wadsworth Jarrell). The GA process can be rather tiring, so I don't make it my end all with articles. I appreciate the efforts of those who do, and those who review FAs and GAs, however. I'm a researcher by trade, so perhaps my experience in writing content related to women's subjects is a bit easier than for others. One struggle can be the lack of free resources online, unless you have access to researcher databases like JSTOR. If there is a gender gap on Wikipedia, there is most likely a gender gap in content available online from reliable sources.

The majority of the project's Featured Articles are biographies. Why has the promotion of non-biographical articles lagged behind biographical articles? What can be done to increase the project's Featured Articles about movements, organizations, artwork, culture, and other historical topics?

OttawaAC: That's a good question, and I wish I had an answer. It may be that editors try to relate to women's history on a personal level, so they gravitate towards biographies. Writing about a movement or an organization often involves more difficult research, since reliable sources on women's history topics can be hard to track down. I'm optimistic that when Wikipedia introduces a less technically challenging editing tool, more editors with a background in history, sociology, cultural studies, and so on, will join in and start writing some interesting material.

The project includes some fictional and mythological characters within its scope. How do these articles relate to the larger goals of WikiProject Women's History? What criteria are used to determine inclusion of an article about a fictional or mythological character into the project?

Penny Richards: There are certainly precedents for this: The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (Edinburgh University Press, 2006) includes entries on mythological and fictional women, for example. I think of coinage, and statuary, where it's not unusual to find real men but allegorical women depicted. (In US history, think George Washington vs. Columbia; the Lincoln Monument vs. the Statue of Liberty.) Women artists and writers have storied representations of their experiences when it wasn't acceptable to be more direct in their statements; the lines between fiction and memoir become a little blurry. (Again from US history, think of works like The Yellow Wall-Paper or The Awakening). So a women's history project will often include cultural depictions, to capture all that.
OttawaAC: Female figures that are cultural icons are capable of developing historic significance, whether they are fictitious, figures from folklore, mythology, or even religious figures like goddesses and saints. They become cultural icons by representing what society idealizes or denigrates in women. Rosie the Riveter has been held up as a positive role model for young women and so she is an influential, and therefore historically notable, modern feminist icon.

Since March is Women's History Month, does the project have any special plans? Is WikiProject Women's History collaborating with any other projects to improve articles in March? How can editors who are not currently affiliated with one of these projects get in on the festivities?

Ipigott: Thanks to alerts from SarahStierch at the beginning of February, many WikiProjects have been informed of the opportunity to collaborate. One of the most active has been WikiProject Architecture, where some 40 new articles on women architects have already been written, many of them directly relevant to women's history.
SarahStierch: Myself and a group of editors are planning events around the world related to women's history month; you can learn more here. I'm hoping this will be able to blossom into something much larger in the future, related to not only writing about women's history, but mainly a larger editing event that encourages women's participation around the world in Wikimedia projects. The link I just provided for WikiWomen's History Month is a great starting point to find inspiration, or connect with your favorite WikiProject and start something there, like for example, WikiProject Architecture has done.

Anything else you'd like to add?

OttawaAC: I'm thrilled to see the increase in Women's History articles in recent months. On the other hand, I'd also like to see the women's angle get more coverage in history articles that have a more general focus, too.


Next week, we'll check out another Wikipedia. Until then, Czech out the archive.

Reader comments

2012-03-12

Extinct humans, birds, and Birdman

This edition covers content promoted from 4 to 10 March 2012.
This image of the obverse of the Washington quarter (from the new featured article on the US coin), shows the quarter as it was originally designed by John Flanagan in 1932; it has been modified since.

Featured articles

A fruit body of the bolete fungus, from the new featured article Boletus frostii. These mushrooms can be recognized by their dark red sticky caps, the red pores, the network-like pattern of the stem, and the bluing reaction to tissue injury.
Modern ruins of Ludlow Castle. The new featured article Pain fitzJohn explains that he gained control over this castle through marriage in 1115.
From the newly featured list of National Hockey League players born in the United Kingdom, Owen Nolan won two Olympic medals for Canada despite being born in Ireland.
The newly featured picture is of the Salvin's Albatross, Thalassarche salvini, a medium sized black and white albatross that ranges across the Southern Ocean.
Original – Five-cent US postal currency, first issue, featuring Thomas Jefferson. The note is 2.5 × 1.75 inches (63.5 × 44.5 mm), from the newly featured picture.

Six featured articles were promoted this week:

  • Washington quarter ( nom), by Wehwalt. The Washington quarter is the present quarter dollar or 25-cent piece issued by the United States Mint. As the United States prepared to celebrate the 1932 bicentennial of the birth of its first president, George Washington, members of the bicentennial committee established by Congress sought a Washington half dollar. Instead, Congress permanently replaced the Standing Liberty quarter, requiring that a depiction of Washington appear on the obverse of the new coin. The new silver quarters, designed by sculptor John Flanagan, entered circulation on August 1, 1932 (above). Since 1999, the original eagle reverse has not been used; instead that side of the quarter has commemorated the 50 states, the nation's other jurisdictions, and National Park Service sites—the last as part of the America the Beautiful Quarters series, which will continue until 2021.
  • Boletus frostii ( nom), by Sasata. Boletus frostii (right), commonly known as Frost's bolete or the apple bolete, is a bolete fungus first described scientifically in 1874. A member of the Boletaceae family, the mushrooms produced by the fungus have tubes and pores instead of gills on the underside of their caps. Boletus frostii is distributed in the eastern United States from Maine to Georgia and Arizona, and south to Mexico and Costa Rica. A mycorrhizal species, its fruit bodies are typically found growing near hardwood trees, especially oak.
  • Voluntary Human Extinction Movement ( nom), by Mark Arsten and Mitch Ames. The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (VHEMT) is an environmental movement that calls for all people to abstain from reproduction to cause the gradual voluntary extinction of mankind. VHEMT supports human extinction primarily to prevent environmental degradation, stating that a decrease in the human population would prevent a significant amount of man-made human suffering. The extinctions of non-human species and the scarcity of resources required by humans are cited as evidence of the harm caused by human overpopulation.
  • Ferugliotherium ( nom), by Ucucha. Ferugliotherium is a genus of fossil mammals from the Campanian and/or Maastrichtian (Late Cretaceous, around 70 million years ago) of Argentina in the family Ferugliotheriidae. It contains a single species, Ferugliotherium windhauseni, which was first described in 1986. Originally interpreted as a member of Multituberculata – an extinct group of small, rodent-like mammals – on the basis of a single brachydont (low crowned) molar, it was recognized as related to the hypsodont (high-crowned) Sudamericidae after the discovery of additional material in the early 1990s.
  • Pain fitzJohn ( nom), by Ealdgyth. Pain fitzJohn (sometimes Payn fitzJohn, Payn FitzJohn, or Pagan fitzJohn died 1137) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman and administrator, one of King Henry I of England's "new men", who owed their positions and wealth to the king. Pain's family originated in Normandy, but he appears to have spent most of his career in England and the Welsh Marches. A son of a minor nobleman, he rose through ability to become an important royal official during Henry's reign. In 1115 he was rewarded with marriage to an heiress, thereby gaining control of the town of Ludlow and its castle (right). After King Henry's death in 1135 Pain supported Henry's nephew, King Stephen. In July 1137 Pain was ambushed by the Welsh and killed as he was leading a relief expedition to the garrison at Carmarthen.
  • Alexis Bachelot ( nom), by Mark Arsten and Livitup. Alexis Bachelot (1796–1837) was a Roman Catholic priest best known for his tenure as the first Prefect Apostolic of the Sandwich Islands; he led the first permanent Catholic mission to the Kingdom of Hawaii, arriving in 1827. Although he had expected the approval of then Hawaiian King Kamehameha II, he learned upon arrival that Kamehameha II had died and a new government hostile towards Catholic missionaries had been installed. Bachelot, however, was able to convert and then quietly minister to a small group of Hawaiians for four years before being deported in 1831 on the orders of Kaʻahumanu, the Kuhina Nui (a position similar to queen regent) of Hawaii.

Featured lists

Five featured lists were promoted this week:

  • List of National Hockey League players born in the United Kingdom ( nom), by Harrias. The National Hockey League (NHL) is a major professional ice hockey league which operates in Canada and the United States. Since its inception in 1917–18, 49 players born within the current borders of the United Kingdom have taken part. Of the 49 players, 21 are from England, 21 from Scotland, 4 from Northern Ireland and 3 from Wales. Steve Thomas and Owen Nolan (right) played over 1,000 regular season games, while Thomas and Steve Smith are the only ones to have appeared in over 100 playoff games.
  • List of Vanderbilt Commodores head football coaches ( nom), by Patriarca12. The Vanderbilt Commodores college football team represents Vanderbilt University in the East Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The Commodores compete as part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision. The program has had 27 head coaches since it began play during the 1890 season. Since December 2010, James Franklin has served as Vanderbilt's head coach. The team has played more than 1,150 games over 121 seasons of Vanderbilt football.
  • List of Malmö FF seasons ( nom), by Reckless182. Malmö Fotbollförening, commonly called Malmö FF, is a Swedish professional association football club based in Malmö, whose first team play in the highest tier of Swedish football, Allsvenskan, as of the 2012 season. Malmö FF was founded on 24 February 1910. The pinnacle of the club's history came in 1979, when, as finalists in both the European Cup and Intercontinental Cup, Malmö FF were ranked as one of the strongest clubs in the world. As of 2012, Malmö FF have played 102 seasons, 89 of which have been spent within the Swedish league system.
  • List of scheduled monuments in Maidstone ( nom), by DavidCane. There are 27 scheduled monuments in Maidstone, Kent, England. In the United Kingdom, a scheduled monument is an archaeological site or historic building of "national importance" that has been given protection against unauthorised change by being placed on a scheduled monuments list, defined in the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 and the National Heritage Act 1983. The borough of Maidstone is a local government district in the English county of Kent. The monuments range in date from a neolithic standing stone to a tiny 18th-century mortuary, but the majority are medieval.
  • Birdman discography ( nom), by Sufur222. The discography of American rapper Birdman consists of five studio albums (four as a solo artist, and one collaboration album with rapper Lil Wayne), one mixtape, nineteen music videos and forty singles, including twenty with him as a featured artist. In 2002, Birdman released his debut studio album Birdman under the recording name "Baby". It peaked at number 24 on the US Billboard 200, spending 23 weeks on the chart. In 2005, Birdman released his second album Fast Money, which peaked at number 9 on the Billboard 200. He has released two more successful albums and has an upcoming fifth album, Bigga Than Life.

Featured pictures

Six featured pictures were promoted this week:

  • US Postal Currency (5 cent; 1862-1863) ( nom; related article), created by the United States Post Office, scanned by Swtpc6800, and nominated by Crisco 1492. Essentially postage stamps printed on Treasury paper, postal currency arose during the American Civil War after people began hoarding coins and other currency. Issued from 21 August 1862 through 27 May 1863, the currency came in 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, and 50¢ denominations.
  • Polet Airlines An-124 RA-82075 ( nom; related article), created by Sergey Kustov and nominated by Russavia. The new featured picture depicts the Antonov An-124, also known as the Ruslan or Condor, a strategic airlift jet aircraft designed by the Ukrainian SSR's Antonov design bureau. First flown in 1982, the An-124 is the world's largest ever serially-manufactured cargo airplane and world's second largest operating cargo aircraft.
  • White-necked Petrel (Pterodroma cervicalis) ( nom; related article) by JJ Harrison. The White-necked Petrel is a seabird that averages 43 centimetres (17 in) in length, with a 30–32 centimetre (12–13 in) wingspan, and is found in much of the Pacific Ocean. However, the bird only breeds in two locations. According to the nominator, this photograph represents the only sighting of the bird in Tasmanian waters.
  • Salvin's Albatross ( nom; related article) by JJ Harrison. This new featured picture depicts Salvin's Albatross, which was once considered a subspecies of the Shy Albatross. The bird, which averages 90 cm (35 in) in length and 2.56 m (8.4 ft) across the wings, nests in various islands in the Southern Ocean. This photograph was taken east of the Tasman Peninsula, Tasmania.
  • Leaden Flycatcher ( nom; related article), created and nominated by JJ Harrison, with modifications by Jjron. After a debate on the exposure and saturation of the image, culminating with nine days in holding for clarification of the results, this edit of the original was promoted. This specimen of Leaden Flycatcher, a 15-centimetre (5.9 in) long passerine bird native to eastern and northern Australia, Indonesia, and Papua New Guinea, was shot in the Australian National Botanic Gardens in Canberra.
  • Mezcala Bridge ( nom; related article), created by Jujutacular and nominated by Pine. Promoted in a narrow 5–2 vote after a nomination in 2010 which failed by half a vote, this new featured image (below) depicts the Mezcala Bridge in Guerrero, Mexico. The cable-stayed bridge, built in the early 1990s, measures 891 m (2,923 ft) in total length over six spans and is used as a toll bridge.

Featured topics

One featured topic was promoted this week:

  • Faryl Smith ( nom) by J Milburn. Faryl Smith, a British teen mezzo-soprano who rose to fame after appearing on Britain's Got Talent in 2008, has released two albums. The 16 year old's debut album, Faryl, was the fastest-selling solo classical album in British chart history; her second album, Wonderland, was less commercially successful. The new featured topic consists of three articles, one on Smith and one for each of her albums.
This new featured picture depicts the Mezcala Bridge on Highway 95 in Guerrero, in Mexico. It spans the Balsas River (known locally as the Mezcala River) close to the western Pacific coast of the country. It was built as part of the 1989–1994 highway restructuring program in Mexico and at the time was considered to be the highest bridge in Mexico and the second highest multiple cable-stayed bridge in the world.


Reader comments

2012-03-12

Proposed decision in 'Article titles', only one open case

The Arbitration Committee neither opened nor closed any cases this week, leaving one open.

Open cases

Article titles and capitalization (Week 7)

This case was opened to review alleged disruptive editing on the Manual of Style (MoS) and other pages pertaining to article naming. The workshop phase had been extended by arbitrator AGK two weeks ago. Drafter David Fuchs posted a series of draft principles on 6 March, with the intention of spurring more focused discussion by parties. The proposed decision posted subsequently includes a statement concerning the status of the MoS as well as a request for more structured discussion and consensus-building on the disputed pages in question.

Other requests and committee action

2012-03-12

Diverse approaches to Wikipedia in Education

Good morning students, please open your textbooks to Chapter 1 and follow along as best you can. "Our great forebear the Public Policy Initiative came to light in the 2010–2011 academic year as a tiny sapling, knowing little of the forest that would sprout after it. The Wikipedia Education Program, supported by the Wikipedia Ambassador Program, is becoming increasingly global and increasingly volunteer-run. The Education desk should be your first point of contact for participation as the Signpost becomes the program's primary chronicler. Class is in session – it has been for 2 years now.


The View from Mexico: beyond article writing

Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education, Mexico City (ITESM)

Most Wikipedia/Wikimedia projects tied to education have been linked to the writing of articles, especially as an alternative to writing research papers, which are traditional in universities in the United States, Canada and some other countries. However, doing research and writing original (i.e. not plagiarized) texts is unknown in more than a few educational systems in the world. In these cases, it is probably not the best idea to have prospective Wikipedians start with writing articles from scratch.

Fortunately, participating in the "wiki-world" is not limited to writing new articles or expanding them, where skills such as research, assessing sources, synthesis and paraphrasing must all be used to avoid plagiarism. There are other ways to get students involved. The first is the translation of articles and other documents "in-wiki", which is acceptable as long as the text in the original language is credited. This is a good first introduction for many students, especially those for whom bilingualism is a very necessary component for their future careers. At my school, ITESM-Ciudad de México, all students are required to obtain a certain score on a standardized test (TOEFL) in English to graduate. No exceptions. For students capable in foreign languages, translation provides a near-immediate way to begin contributing significant content in their own language, and a way to teach how Wikipedia articles should be structured for those who do go on to write new articles. It also gives language teachers a handy way to teach rhetoric – especially comparative rhetoric – as students make decisions as to how to appropriately express ideas from one language in another.

Wikimedia projects do not need to be confined to classroom activities. For the Spring 2012 semester, the International Baccalaureate (IB) program at ITESM-CCM in Mexico City began a pilot program to have selected students work with Wikipedia as part of the "CAS" requirement. IB requires all of its students to fulfill a number of hours of activities outside of the classroom related to community service, creativity, and physical activity. The many opportunities that Wikipedia and its sister projects offer can be applied to all three of these criteria, which are broadly defined. The seven students who were selected for the pilot are Laloreed22, Jeanny Mos, LeValedush, CarlaFlores25, K.fontecha, Rob dvr and Carlosharo17. For training and initial introduction into the wider Wikipedia community, we decided to take advantage of the Teylers Museum Multilingual Challenge, running concurrently with the semester, working on translating articles related to the challenge into Spanish. While we are working in translation as an introduction, the students are not limited to this activity to fulfill their CAS requirement. Other activities such as photography, working with galleries, libraries, archives and museums (GLAM), and just about anything else that any Wikipedian can do, these students can do as well—it all depends on their interests and abilities.

With a bit of creativity, we can work with teachers to provide a wide variety of options: GLAM activities for those in fields such as library science and archeology; law and political science students can delve into questions about copyright, open culture and how these apply in their countries; and we should not forget those in the information technology and communications fields. For many of these students, these activities open doors and help them stand apart from their peers, perhaps the greatest gift working with Wikimedia can give.

Princeton's Mudd Library edit-a-thon

Mudd Library Edit-a-thon participants; see Commons for further media from the event

Another alternative educational approach has been a focus on work with university libraries (the "L" in GLAM) outside of the context of a specific class.

On Saturday, 18 February 2012, a group of sixteen enthusiastic volunteers—including Princeton University undergraduates, Wikipedians from the Wikimedia New York City chapter, Princeton community members, and Mudd Library staff— gathered for an edit-a-thon at Princeton University’s Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library. The event was organized by Princeton senior and technical services student worker Q Miceli, with the goal of introducing students and community members to the Wikipedia editing process through writing and updating Wikipedia articles about the university. Miceli subsequently wrote an entry on the Mudd Manuscript Library blog as well as an edit-a-thon how-to, which serves as a guide to those interested in emulating the event.

By the numbers, there were 16 attendees, six user accounts registered, four articles created, and nine articles expanded. Mudd Library is considering hosting another edit-a-thon around Princeton’s Reunions in late May. Feedback from University Library staff has been favorable, and participants and Princeton alumni who could not attend were eager to be notified if another edit-a-thon was scheduled.

Notes in chalk

  • Tools for tracking: A new Wikipedia Education Program MediaWiki extension is in development with the express purpose of improving management of the program, particularly the monitoring of participating students and their contributions.
  • Welcome to the academical village: This week saw the creation of WikiProject Academical Village, an effort in draft form intended to help standardise the educational outreach initiative by coordinating participants' activities "in the traditional and idiosyncratic WikiProject style."
  • Education Program hires a liaison: Rob Schnautz, who will be better known to readers as Bob the Wikipedian, has been hired to fill the position of Global Education Program Online Communications Contractor (likely the longest Foundation title yet created). In his new position, Schnautz will be responsible for "support and direct online communications around Wikimedia's Global Education Program ... [helping to] ensure effective communication with the Wikipedia community regarding the Program working closely with Online Ambassadors as well as the WMF staff involved". For further insight into what this might mean for the project, see the Signpost's in-depth interview with the Foundation's latest recruit.

    Reader comments

2012-03-12

Git learning curve steep but not insurmountable, plus a diff style we can all agree on?

Developers bracing themselves for steep learning curve after Git move

There are alternative solutions, but none of them are viable without development work. Gerrit is viable right now, in its current state. Its downside is that its interface is slightly painful.

Every tool we use is going to have something we dislike about it interface-wise.

—Operations Engineer Ryan Lane describing new code review tool Gerrit

Discussion of the move to Git took on a more serious tone this week, focusing on ways in which the (particularly volunteer) developer community might be unprepared for the sheer scale of the change that lies ahead ( wikitech-l mailing list). The long and detailed thread provided developers with a useful opportunity to ask detailed questions about the system coming into operation later in the month.

The difficulty, it seems, is that there is no easy option for developers: even casual contributors will have to get used to a completely different development workflow (incorporating a new process for committing and a new process for reviewing and commenting on other developers' code), not to mention a whole new vocabulary. Unpicking that steep learning curve and presenting it in "bitesize chunks" has proved tricky for the WMF team overseeing the move, given the amount of interdependence between a developer's command-line Git instance and the Wikimedia-side Gerrit review system with its much-critiqued user interface. On the plus side, numerous websites exist to help users unfamiliar with Git pick up not just the basics but also the more tricky syntax that developers will need to master if they are to contribute fully to MediaWiki after the March 28 transition.

Ultimately, few seem worried that developers will not be able to master the new system in good time, although, in the words of Diederik van Liere (currently a consultant at the WMF), "a new workflow requires new habits and that might take more time to develop". Among those effects with the potential to linger, the front-runner seems to be the (not yet fully understood) implications of the move on the historically pertinent volunteer-staff divide. Only time, it seems, will tell.

February Engineering Report published

WMF developers are currently working on a way to turn SMS messages (and their visually similar USSD counterparts) – the preserve of "chatty" conversations in the developed world – into an important link between the developing world and the sum of human knowledge.

The Wikimedia Foundation's engineering report for February 2012 was published this week on the Wikimedia Techblog and on the MediaWiki wiki, giving an overview of all Foundation-sponsored technical operations in that month. Ultimately, it was a month dominated by a handful of big projects, each of which have already been covered in the Signpost: the problematic Swift deployment, preparations for the move to Git, the 1.19 deployments (see release notes) and, to a lesser extent, progress with the Wikimedia Android app, which is now providing the foundation for a new Wikimedia iPhone app. As ever, however, the report provided details of many smaller projects that had received less of a spotlight.

One such project is the creation of a Wiktionary app by a team of Canadian students under the guidance of WMF staff developers. According to the report, the team is currently focusing on "targeting bugs, cleaning things up and improving usability in the v0.1 Alpha release". In similar news, there was also an update on efforts to make the MobileFrontend extension (which powers m.en.wikipedia.org and family) less WMF-centric, following a sharp critique of its shortcomings in January, as well as news that good progress is being made on a project to provide Wikipedia content via SMS/ USSD, a major boost for mobile-only visitors on 2G connections (such as those found in parts of the developing world).

Elsewhere, the report noted the steps being taken to improve the number and depth of full site backups; two WMF locations now host copies of all Wikimedia dumps and two external mirrors are currently in the final stages of preparation. Finally, there was confirmation that a short period of slowness experienced on February 27 was in fact the result of a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack of unknown origin and motivation. The attack, which lasted only ten minutes, was brought to an end by the quick work of system administrators.

In brief

Not all fixes may have gone live to WMF sites at the time of writing; some may not be scheduled to go live for many weeks.

  • WMF confirms GoDaddy departure: WMF legal counsel Michelle Paulson blogged on behalf of the Foundation this week to confirm the transfer of Wikimedia's many domain names from previous registrar GoDaddy to competitor MarkMonitor. Although the move is of little technical importance, Paulson said she was hopeful "the company will help the Foundation consolidate and centralize management of all of its domains, will provide services needed to manage a global domain portfolio and will better protect our domains with additional security features", with the latter-most thought to refer to mostly trademark infringement and phishing attempts.
  • Wikimedians, meet Wikidata: Wikimedia Deutschland's new community communications manager for its Wikidata project, KDE board member Lydia Pintscher, has announced an introductory communications road map for the project, with which regular readers of the "Technology report" will be relatively familiar. The project's current focus is on collecting input, creating resources "to explain the project better", setting up infrastructure, and working on a structured input collection system; the heavy development work is expected to begin next month. (Those excited by the potential of the project will be interested to know that the Signpost will be running a special report in April in order to address the topic in more detail.)
  • ProofreadPage in need of TLC: Localisation team member and prolific blogger Gerard Meijssen used a post on his personal blog to highlight the plight of ProofreadPage, an OCR-based extension that provides the backbone of the Wikisource projects. Like many extensions, it has suffered from the semi-retirement of one of its key maintainers, prompting others to make ad hoc edits to keep it functioning. The good news, Meijssen reported, was that (unlike many other such extensions) a new lead maintainer for ProofreadPage had now emerged from the developer community.
  • Better mathematics rendering coming soon to a wiki near you: WMF lead software architect Brion Vibber wrote this week about his efforts to implement MathJax, a JavaScript-based system for rendering mathematical notation ( JavaScript-only example) that boasts a considerable number of advantages over the existing server-side system, including better zooming of text and better inline display. In his post, Vibber said that he was hopeful that the feature-rich, actively maintained framework would make it into the user preferences selection list "soon", before becoming the default at a later point in time.
  • Approvals at Bots/Requests for Approvals. Six BRfAs were recently approved:
    1. BG19bot's 2nd BRfA, for the automatic removal of {{ WikiProject Sports}} from biography talk pages
    2. BattyBot's 8th BRfA, to change {{ Unreferenced}} to {{ BLP unsourced}} on articles in Category:Living people
    3. EnzaiBot, operation of another interwiki.py interwiki bot
    4. Thehelpfulbot's 11th BrFA, to send newsletters or other talk page messages to the User talk: and Talk: when requested to by users or WikiProjects
    5. TPBot, picking up several tasks previously performed by User:X!'s bots (running the exact same code; one of the reasons bot authors are encouraged to publish their source code). It will update the RfX Report, update the RfX Tally, update CratStats for each bureaucrat, and update Adminstats for each admin.
    6. ListManBot, which will maintain MediaWiki:Bad image list
15 BRfAs are open at the time of writing. Community input is encouraged.
  • Landing page project introduced: WMF community liaison for product development Oliver Keyes used a post on the Foundation-l mailing list this week to announce an early-stages project to improve the experience of new users bewildered by the page that resulted from clicking on a red link. While the neatness of the prototype landing page could not be denied, there was earlier skepticism about the scope of the problem, at least on established wikis where article creation tends to be a premeditated rather than impulse action.
  • Differing diff colours remain on agenda: The process to formulate new diff colours for MediaWiki continued this week; the latest version (pictured below) replaces the current system of paragraph-level background colouring (plus sentence-level text colouring) with a heavy border in either blue (for lines added) or yellow (lines removed) at the paragraph level, and soft background colouring at the sentence level. The move is intended to make diffs more accessible, particularly to those with red-green colour blindness.
The diff style provided for by the latest MediaWiki code, and hence set to go live within weeks


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12 March 2012

 

2012-03-12

Liaising with the Education Program

On March 6, Rob Schnautz was announced as the Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program community liaison. The following report is primarily based on an interview with Schnautz conducted in the subsequent week over IRC and email; for the transcript of the extended conversation, see the Signpost's Interviews desk archive.


"I heard there was an encyclopedia anyone could edit, and I vowed never to touch it" – the first impressions of future administrator, ambassador and Wikimedia Foundation contractor Rob Schnautz, pictured here at a 2011 Education Program training session for campus ambassadors in Bloomington, Indiana

The relentless volunteer

On learning of Wikipedia's existence in 2004, Rob Schnautz was at first skeptical about contributing: "I heard there was an encyclopedia anyone could edit, and I vowed never to touch it". An initial flurry of "pretty unconstructive" edits in early 2006 were overcome after he acclimatised to the project, and under the alias Bob the Wikipedian he has since graduated to a fixture of the core community: "I've become one of the 3,000 top editors, an administrator (in 2009), a regional ambassador (in 2011), and now online communications contractor this month." In his capacity as a volunteer editor, he has focused on templates and stubs related to paleozoology. In spite of its tendency to attract drama (due to its scope and impact), Wikipedia:WikiProject Tree of Life's {{ automatic taxobox}} has been a landmark collaboration: "I decided to get involved with that, and I've been helping change the face of organic life on Wikipedia since then." We asked what motivated him to become involved in the education program initially, and later as a regional ambassador in the Great Lakes region:

I was doing some research on brown recluses one day, and noticed the banner at the top of the page wasn't asking for money, so I decided to read it; the Foundation was looking for people interested in motivating professors and students to use Wikipedia for educational assignments. So, I figured it couldn't hurt to see what that was about, and requested more information. Before I knew it, I was filling out an application and getting an interview set up for the role of regional ambassador in my region.
The regional ambassador role is a lot like your typical middle management job. I recruit campus ambassadors throughout the region, as well as professors, and make sure we have the resources we need to support their classes. I also check on individual groups of campus ambassadors and professors (we call these groups "pods") throughout the semester to make sure they're on track and to let the Foundation staff know how things are going so they can make their reports and make adjustments to the program if necessary.

Schnautz sees his brief as community liaison as "to bridge the communication gap between the community of Wikipedia and the Education Program", and explained what attracted him to the position:

I'm one of those guys who has to stay busy. Graduation was just around the corner, and since I like the education environment, it looked like a good way to stay involved. This isn't the first time I've volunteered; I volunteer for lots of things and usually enjoy them; it's satisfying to help someone purely to help them.

An evolving program

The Education Program is two years old now, and there have been several pilot schemes affecting the English Wikipedia to varying success, notably the United States EP (which pioneered the program with its well-received Public Policy Initiative), the Canadian EP and the Indian EP (deemed a failure by the Foundation). The Foundation have also launched pilots in Brazil, India, and Egypt, and Schnautz revealed that chapters in Germany, the UK, and Italy have expressed interest in organising their own schemes, as have volunteers in Mexico, Macedonia, Russia, Israel, and the Czech Republic. We asked what organisers have learned from the experience thus far:

We've learned that the most successful pilots are those taught in a language the students are fluent in, and we've also come to understand a bit more about the academic cultures of various parts of the world. For instance, we didn't expect to learn that in India, plagiarism is a concept most students are unfamiliar with. We've also learned that bigger isn't necessarily better, which is why we've begun enforcing a new policy that requires at least one Wikipedian supporting every 15 students.

Organisers had "found that larger courses became more difficult for campus ambassadors and instructors to effectively manage", something for which "an interface that's hard to navigate and seems to require a lot more effort to maintain than it's worth" was partially responsible. In response to these findings and to prompting from the community, the Foundation has developed a dedicated MediaWiki extension and a set of requirements for courses participating in the program from 2012 on, including stipulations that each classroom be assigned experienced Wikipedians and that the number of ambassadors needed to scale up according to class sizes. The intended impact is that the organisers are "hoping that we see higher quality in student contributions".

Schnautz (left) at a July 2011 regional ambassador training summit in Boston, Massachusetts

Although Schnautz is set to work closely with online ambassadors as part of his new role, he had not been involved with the group when he spoke to The Signpost and so was not in a position to discuss the issues Wikipedians have been raising with their selection, monitoring and orientation processes (though he later contacted The Signpost to highlight a list of ambassador principles). He had much to say on the topic of campus ambassadors, however, outlining the ideal candidate for recruitment as "someone who has some sort of experience teaching others, knows how to edit Wikipedia (or is capable of learning in a short period of time), has good communication skills, and is comfortable working in the academic environment", with the caveat that "The folks we choose as campus ambassadors aren't your typical Wikipedia editor, though. We take care to make sure their social side is well-developed."

Students in the program have run into difficulty with Wikipedia's community of editors, falling afoul of the project's norms of original research, plagiarism and inclusion criteria and leaving editors with substantial clean-up efforts (see reports of problematic contributions to medical articles by Canadian students and The Signpost's special report on the Indian pilot). In the event of such issues arising, ambassadors are expected to act as "teachers and guides" rather than taking responsibility for the students' edits or intervening directly on their behalf:

Campus ambassadors are expected to take all responsibility for teaching students to edit Wikipedia.... The idea here is that the professor shouldn't have to teach the students anything Wikipedia-related in order for the class to be successful.
The campus ambassadors take on a mentor-type role, offering pointers and help, but not fixing the actions of students. When conflict arises between a student and the community, the student is encouraged to stand up for him- or herself, and the campus ambassador will offer suggestions as needed. Also, the campus ambassadors are expected to review the edits of students and provide feedback on the edits. I usually tell my campus ambassadors to encourage students to find their niche in Wikipedia. If they're going to become a full-time editor, it won't happen by simply writing an essay. ... We want them to have the full experience any other Wikipedian would have. Plus some, of course.

A failure to communicate

Schnautz hopes to rectify the communications gap between the Foundation and the editing community; "The staff is committed to correcting their mistakes and doing better next time"

Why is a community liaison required at this stage in the program's development?

Following the recent discussions on the English Wikipedia, the Education Program staff have realized they aren't very effective in communicating with Wikipedians. That's why they've contracted me, an active Wikipedia contributor who happens to be very familiar with the Education Program. My support of the Education Program and my relations with the community are essential for someone communicating between the two parties.

The report by Tory Read on the India Education Program (IEP) found that "the majority of problems that emerged during implementation could have been largely avoided by engaging the Wikipedia community as a partner in the pilot project planning process". Asked how he planned to change the culture of communication surrounding the program, he laid out his plan for reform:

The changes you'll notice in the "culture" here are that the communication with other Wikipedians will actually be done by a Wikipedian rather than someone who doesn't really understand the ways Wikipedians communicate. I'll do my best to make myself available if there are questions or concerns, and if there is something that we can use the input of the community, I'll go out of my way to get that input from the community."

In response to the Read report's characterisation of announcement locations as ineffective and scattered, Schnautz declared that "I'm working on figuring out which platforms are effective for reaching the folks I need to reach out to. One of the goals in the next several months is to consolidate the program's pages so they're easier to navigate, with the hopes that this will also help centralize related discussions." He also highlighted those projects other than the English Wikipedia that needed to be catered to as one of the reasons why much of the communications effort, such as the program's newsletter, has been centralised at the outreach wiki rather than locally.

Schnautz acknowledged that the "need to refocus the IEP is perhaps the biggest reason the Education Program is being given so much attention this year", that "[w]e absolutely can't have the same problems happen again", and summarised the state of community relations with the programs in its wake as follows:

The current state of things is that Wikipedians don't trust the Education Program staff. If all goes well, my role as online communicator will complement any actions the Program makes. We've gotten into a sort of rut with [our handling of] the IEP, and hopefully this new style of communication will help us get back out as we plan for the second IEP pilot.

Closing thoughts

The purpose of the Education Program, as it is and as it should be, is something that has been the focus of much debate, with many Wikipedians interpreting Foundation executive director Sue Gardner's comments as prioritising the growth of editors and articles, others agitating to make the quality of the content the paramount concern and one editor, Mike Christie, authoring a Signpost opinion essay urging the initiative to refocus on recruiting the academics themselves. We asked Schnautz whether it is first and foremost concerned with editor recruitment, content creation, building relations with academia, or some other focus. Editor recruitment was "certainly one of the big goals", he confirmed, citing its impact on "both improving and maintaining the health" of the projects and the ultimate threat of Wikipedia's falling into obscurity and irrelevancy without it. He went on:

Content creation goes hand-in-hand with editor recruitment. If we have a steady input of editors, we get a steady input of content as well. After all, without editors, there's no new content. Editors are also required in order to update old content and patrol recent changes.
Keep in mind the influx of new editors also means an influx in experienced editors, since many students end up liking to edit Wikipedia. That's where experienced editors are born.

We asked what his message would be to those editors who feel frustrated at the impact of the programs to date, who resent being asked to deal with the influx of student edits, or who are skeptical as to whether the programs are worth continuing:

Our attention is increasingly shifting from numbers to quality. We're taking preventative measures as we gear up for the coming semester. Classes will be smaller. Experienced Wikipedians will be required in every classroom.


Whether such talk will win over a wary community remains to be seen, but with the Education Program on the cusp of dramatic expansion, its success or failure will likely have a significant impact on the encyclopaedia and the Wikimedia Foundation's relationship with the editors who maintain it. The Signpost will not be standing idly by; for an in-depth look at the activities of the program, interested readers can follow our nascent Education report in the weeks and months to come.

Full transcript of interview

The following is a transcript of an interview conducted by Skomorokh for The Signpost with Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program community liaison Rob Schnautz over IRC on March 9, 2012. The transcript has been edited to remove parenthetical comments, with minor alterations to phrasing and sequencing for coherence. It is made available by the express consent of both parties. For the edited interview which ran in The Signpost's March 12, 2012 edition, see here.


The Signpost: You've just been hired as the Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program community liaison. Can you tell us a little about your background as an editor?

Rob Schnautz: Sure. Back in 2004, I heard there was an encyclopedia anyone could edit, and I vowed never to touch it. But in 2006, I broke that vow when I looked up antimicrobial pen. I was pretty impressed that Wikipedia had an article on something that wasn't covered anywhere else, and just HAD to join it. So my first few edits were pretty unconstructive, but by the following summer I was uploading photos on backlogs. Since then, I've become one of the 3,000 top editors, an administrator (in 2009), a regional ambassador (in 2011), and now online communications contractor this month. Most of my personal free time work is on templates and paleozoology stubs. And I enjoy making SVG maps.

Templates, stubs and image creation sound like lonely areas to work in; what have been your most discussion-intensive activities besides the education programs?

Back in 2010 I heard Martin Smith was working on a project called the automatic taxobox. Scientific classification uses a sort of database-like structure, so this is something the logic-minded folks at the Tree of Life had been talking about for years. So I decided to get involved with that, and I've been helping change the face of organic life on Wikipedia since then. It involves a lot of drama at times, since it is relevant to a large percentage of articles.

What motivated you to become involved in the education program initially?

I was doing some research on brown recluses one day, and noticed the banner at the top of the page wasn't asking for money, so I decided to read it; the Foundation was looking for people interested in motivating professors and students to use Wikipedia for educational assignments. So, I figured it couldn't hurt to see what that was about, and requested more information. Before I knew it, I was filling out an application and getting an interview set up for the role of regional ambassador in my region.

Volunteering for such a task requires a significant investment of time and effort; what was it about the idea that appealed to you?

I'm one of those guys who has to stay busy. Graduation was just around the corner, and since I like the education environment, it looked like a good way to stay involved. This isn't the first time I've volunteered; I volunteer for lots of things and usually enjoy them; it's satisfying to help someone purely to help them.

Last year you took on the role of regional ambassador for the Great Lakes region of North America; what has that experience been like?

To clarify, two regional ambassadors were selected for the Great Lakes region, the other being Chanitra Bishop. Since we don't live near each other, we decided to split the region into two subregions, the Central and the Reaches. I've been working with the Reaches, which includes Kentucky, Wisconsin, and Michigan. The regional ambassador role is a lot like your typical middle management job. I recruit campus ambassadors throughout the region, as well as professors, and make sure we have the resources we need to support their classes. I also check on individual groups of campus ambassadors and professors (we call these groups "pods") throughout the semester to make sure they're on track and to let the Foundation staff know how things are going so they can make their reports and make adjustments to the program if necessary.

What is the extent of the programs that are engaged with the English Wikipedia in the current academic year? How many courses/professors/universities?

The Great Lakes Reaches subregion is actually the most active one with ten classes this semester at six universities. I actually was temporarily responsible for Ontario as well from November to February, since the Steering Committee decided they wanted to try having a regional ambassador pilot in Canada. Ontario has been more active than any state, to my knowledge, so it was sort of a relief to find out at the end of February that someone else would be taking over managing Canada this month. Oh, and you asked how many professors; we currently have six in this region.

And beyond the region, what is the scope of the programs involving English Wikipedia?

I don't have global figures available for Canada or the pilot programs around the world, but I can tell you there are over 50 classes affiliated with the United States Education Program this semester. We've also launched pilot programs in Brazil, India, and Egypt. Various groups outside the Foundation have been so impressed with the successes of the United States and Canada Education Programs that they are making efforts to start programs in Germany and the United Kingdom as well. Also, Mexico, Macedonia, Russia, Israel, and the Czech Republic have some volunteers stepping up.

The Wikimedia Foundation has made the education program one of its top priorities for 2011-2012 [cf. the mid-year report]; can you explain to our readers just what the primary goals are? Is it first and foremost concerned with editor recruitment, content creation, building relations with academia, or what?

Editor recruitment is certainly one of the big goals here. The Foundation is recognizing a shrinking number of editors, and we're not sure whether that's necessarily a good or bad thing. Content creation goes hand-in-hand with editor recruitment. If we have a steady input of editors, we get a steady input of content as well. After all, without editors, there's no new content. Editors are also required in order to update old content and patrol recent changes. In terms of the Education Program, the Foundation has recognized the India Education Program's shortcomings, and because of that, we're realizing we need to refocus exactly how we're doing it before we can bring it on as strong as it was last semester. This need to refocus the IEP is perhaps the biggest reason the Education Program is being given so much attention this year.

So, to clarify, the Education Program sees editor recruitment as the primary vector for improving the health of the project, and through that, the content of the encyclopaedia?

Both improving and maintaining the health, yes. Without editors, Wikipedia becomes one of those old websites that no one can really use anymore. An encyclopedia has to be kept up-to-date. I actually just pushed my 1965 World Book Encyclopedia out the door since its topics are hardly even relevant today.

The education program is two years old now, and there have been several pilot schemes of varying success. What have organisers learned from the experience thus far?

We've learned that the most successful pilots are those taught in a language the students are fluent in, and we've also come to understand a bit more about the academic cultures of various parts of the world. For instance, we didn't expect to learn that in India, plagiarism is a concept most students are unfamiliar with. We've also learned that bigger isn't necessarily better, which is why we've begun enforcing a new policy that requires at least one Wikipedian supporting every 15 students.

How are the issues of students' difficulties with Wikipedia's content policies such as no original research and plagiarism being addressed?

Our campus ambassadors have been taking on the responsibility of identifying what areas their assigned classes are struggling in and working to improve that to the best of their ability. We also have made various resources available on the Wikimedia Outreach website, designed with these students in mind. One resource you may have noticed that's actually been implemented at the Wikimedia Commons is the new image that appears when you're getting ready to upload an image, which serves to help students learn what's free and what's not. Campus ambassadors were informed about the plagiarism dangers when the risk was identified in India, and I'm happy to say that (at least in my own region), this has been effective. When we're working with science-related courses, there's a tendency for instructors to want to have their students publish their research in an article. We've been making sure this doesn't happen by suggesting the instructor have students do synthetic research around the topic they're researching and publish that instead.

So you're relying on focused direction from campus ambassadors and instructors to ensure students do not submit unencyclopaedic material?

Exactly. Without our volunteers, this program would fall through the floor! All of our regional, campus, and online ambassadors are volunteers. The paid staff don't usually come in contact with the students or the instructors.

Are there any other procedures in place or planned to monitor or curate student edits?

Each course has its own course page on the relevant Wikipedia. This course page includes the course syllabus and a list of everyone involved with that course-- instructors, ambassadors, and students. Each student is required to list any articles they are working on for their assignment. That way, it's easier for campus ambassadors and professors to review their articles. As an added bonus, the Wikipedia community can use these lists to find out what's being worked on as well.

Can you explain the criteria according to which campus and online ambassadors are selected, what training they receive, and what guidelines they operate under?

Online ambassador recruitment is something I haven't been involved with, but I can talk about campus ambassadors. Campus ambassadors submit an application to their regional ambassador, who interviews them if they seem qualified. A qualified campus ambassador would be someone who has some sort of experience teaching others, knows how to edit Wikipedia (or is capable of learning in a short period of time), has good communication skills, and is comfortable working in the academic environment. The training we provide them with shows them what they will be responsible for teaching students in the classroom, and offers tips on how to go about teaching these concepts. If the campus ambassador is unfamiliar with Wikipedia (and we take special care to make sure they are at least technologically competent enough to use Wikipedia), we introduce them to it and show them how to do the things they'll need to teach. Campus ambassadors are expected to take all responsibility for teaching students to edit Wikipedia. As we like to say, they "guide students through their first 100 edits". The idea here is that the professor shouldn't have to teach the students anything Wikipedia-related in order for the class to be successful. Campus ambassadors play a huge mentor role, and that's why the 1:15 ratio I mentioned earlier is important.

Specifically, what minimum standards of understanding Wikipedia's policies, guidelines and social norms are required of ambassadors?

Ambassadors are expected to respect the same guidelines that any respectable editor would respect. The folks we choose as campus ambassadors aren't your typical Wikipedia editor, though. We take care to make sure their social side is well-developed.

Are there guidelines or codes of conduct for ambassadors in particular?

We tell them that they're basically going to be the "face of Wikipedia" for the students they support, since these students have never met a Wikipedian before in most cases. However they present themselves is how the students are likely to view Wikipedia as a whole. We don't have any code of conduct that I'm aware of, but I've so far only worked with Americans and Canadians, where professionalism is pretty well-defined.

You mentioned requiring students to publicly list themselves and the articles they are working on for review. What role do ambassadors have in evaluating edits by students? Should they act as intermediaries between the students and regular editors, or allow the student submissions to be judged by the community directly?

The campus ambassadors take on a mentor-type role, offering pointers and help, but not fixing the actions of students. When conflict arises between a student and the community, the student is encouraged to stand up for him- or herself, and the campus ambassador will offer suggestions as needed. Also, the campus ambassadors are expected to review the edits of students and provide feedback on the edits. I usually tell my campus ambassadors to encourage students to find their niche in Wikipedia. If they're going to become a full-time editor, it won't happen by simply writing an essay.

So the ambassadors have a responsive role, coming to students' aid when needed but otherwise leaving them to navigate the project independently? The ambassadors' feedback is directed at the students, with the edits themselves to be handled by the editing community?

Yes. We want them to have the full experience any other Wikipedian would have. Plus some, of course.

Ambassadors don't act as intermediaries between students and other Wikipedians, rather they are guides.

Exactly. Teachers and guides.

Aside from education on best editing practices, what is the procedure for addressing problematic student contributions?

Depending on the level of the problem, the campus ambassador may be able to address it alone. However, sometimes there are bigger issues, like an article being deleted. When that happens, campus ambassadors are asked to get in touch with the instructor and the regional ambassador to discuss whether and how to resolve the issue.

Could you elaborate on the path of response on the encyclopaedia/community aspects of the problematic contributions?

Sorry, can you clarify your question?
Perhaps with an example.

Are regular editors expected to resolve the encyclopaedic impact of situations where students' contributions have been suboptimal? So, if a student adds originally-researched content to a medical article, for instance; who is tasked with addressing that?

If a regular editor finds it, it'll get deleted immediately. If a campus ambassador finds it, they warn the student of the consequences of this, with the hopes the student will correct it before someone else finds it.

'What procedures are in place to monitor ambassador performance, and how are issues with ambassadors' conduct addressed if they do arise?

If an ambassador isn't displaying optimal performance, I do what any manager would do: make it a point to discuss this with them and come up with some sort of way to improve the situation. If they're unresponsive, we ask them to step down from the role.

So the best way to address such issues is through the chain-of-command, if direct engagement with the ambassador in question is unsuccessful?

I'm not familiar with that terminology, but I'm not aware of a better way to address issues with individuals.

What is your brief as Education Program community liaison?

My role is to bridge the communication gap between the community of Wikipedia and the Education Program. In general, the staff at Wikimedia are usually not experienced Wikipedians, but are qualified in other ways (managerial, accounting, programming, etc). Following the recent discussions on the English Wikipedia, the Education Program staff have realized they aren't very effective in communicating with Wikipedians. That's why they've contracted me, an active Wikipedia contributor who happens to be very familiar with the Education Program. My support of the Education Program and my relations with the community are essential for someone communicating between the two parties.

The report by Tory Read on the India Education Program found that "the majority of problems that emerged during implementation could have been largely avoided by engaging the Wikipedia community as a partner in the pilot project planning process". How do you plan to change the culture of communication surrounding the eduction programs, to reach out to and encourage feedback from the community?

The changes you'll notice in the "culture" here are that the communication with other Wikipedians will actually be done by a Wikipedian rather than someone who doesn't really understand the ways Wikipedians communicate. I'll do my best to make myself available if there are questions or concerns, and if there is something that we can use the input of the community, I'll go out of my way to get that input from the community. For example, I'm hoping you've noticed at least one of the many notices I put out about the new MediaWiki extension that we're inviting the community to beta-test.

Sure, although there is a question hanging over the system of announcements from program organisers; to refer to the Read report again, the locations used for announcements were deemed ineffective and scattered. At the moment, announcements of initiatives relating to the English Wikipedia education programs are being posted separately at the different national project talkpages, as well as on various mailing lists, with much of the documentation and development taking place off-wiki (i.e. at outreach wiki/mediawiki). As these talkpages show, English Wikipedians have been largely unresponsive to these cross-postings lately. Is there any plan to consolidate these communications, for example using a newsletter or noticeboard, so as to facilitate focused discussion among English Wikipedians concerned with the education program? Read report: "Wikipedians recommend ... that each announcement include a link to planning documents and a central communications page on English Wikipedia". Is this being implemented?

There are so many platforms (mailing lists, noticeboards, village pumps, hundreds of talk pages) for communication among Wikipedians, and it's hard to find a combination of ten or twenty that all relevant Wikipedians use. I'm working on figuring out which platforms are effective for reaching the folks I need to reach out to. One of the goals in the next several months is to consolidate the program's pages so they're easier to navigate, with the hopes that this will also help centralize related discussions. We currently send out a newsletter that goes to people involved in the Education Program, but sending that same newsletter to interested Wikipedians sounds like a good idea. I'll make a note to talk to the appropriate person about that.

What do you think the most pressing issues for the education programs are in the coming year, in terms of community engagement and otherwise?

The current state of things is that Wikipedians don't trust the Education Program staff. If all goes well, my role as online communicator will complement any actions the Program makes. We've gotten into a sort of rut with the IEP, and hopefully this new style of communication will help us get back out as we plan for the second IEP pilot.

What would your message be to those editors who feel frustrated at the impact of the programs to date, who resent being asked to deal with the influx of student edits, or who are skeptical as to whether the programs are worth continuing?

Our attention is increasingly shifting from numbers to quality. We're taking preventative measures as we gear up for the coming semester. Classes will be smaller. Experienced Wikipedians will be required in every classroom. Also, keep in mind the influx of new editors also means in influx in experienced editors, since many students end up liking to edit Wikipedia. That's where experienced editors are born.

So one of the things both the program organisers and the community learned from the pilot program was that which courses are selected for inclusion in the programs, and especially how large and well-supported they are, is an important predictor of success. Can you outline the main learnings on this point?

We've found that larger courses became more difficult for campus ambassadors and instructors to effectively manage. After all, it's a lot of work to review an article, especially for someone new to Wikipedia. As a result, and per input from the community, we decided on a set of guidelines for course selection. Those guidelines have been in effect since the beginning of 2012 and can be found at outreach:Wikipedia Education Program/Participation Requirements. To highlight a few of these, we're requiring experienced Wikipedians to be in the classroom, and we're imposing a limit on the number of students allowed in a course. As the class gets larger, more ambassadors are required. For every 15 students, at least one ambassador is required.

What impact do program organisers hope the revised participation requirements to have?

We're hoping that we see higher quality in student contributions.

The Wikimedia Foundation is also developing a software extension to facilitate the education program. What motivated this and how is the extension intended to help?

To date, anyone participating in the program has been dealing with an interface that's hard to navigate and seems to require a lot more effort to maintain than it's worth. For instance, instructors who have never used Wikipedia have been expected to use macro-style templates that the average experienced Wikipedian might have difficulties figuring out. You can see an example of what we've been using at WP:United States Education Program/Courses/Present. As a result of the difficult-to-use interface, important details are often omitted, like what articles are included in a class, and sometimes a class might not find its way to the directory in the first place. The MediaWiki developers have been working on solving this problem for us by developing a new extension for MediaWiki, specifically designed to function as a sort of database software for managing the Education Program data. I've been testing it out this month and it's a very slick piece of art; it'll really simplify things.

As we wrap up, do you have anything to say to readers interested in learning more about or engaging with the Education Program?

I do want to emphasize that my presence online doesn't mean the staff won't be online. They'll still be available to the community, and even helping make sure things don't slip past my attention. Also, the pilot programs in Brazil and Cairo have been modeled after what we've learned from the first pilot in India. We absolutely can't have the same problems happen again. As we enter the second India Pilot, we will not proceed without input from the Wikipedian community. The staff is committed to correcting their mistakes and doing better next time.
If you'd like to have a Wikipedia Education Program course at your institution, let us know!

Rob Shnautz, thank you very much for speaking with The Signpost.

My pleasure, thanks.


Reader comments

2012-03-12

Women's history, what we're missing, and why it matters

Sarah Stierch holds a Wikimedia Foundation community fellowship for the encouragement of women's participation in Wikimedia projects. In this report she addresses – in conversation with four interested interlocutors – the topic of Women's History Month, why it should matter to Wikipedians, what the project loses in the gender gap, and what's to be done about it.

The views expressed are those of the author and interviewees only, and do not necessarily represent those of The Signpost or its staff.


We can make Wikipedia a greater resource for women's history.

March is Women's History Month, a time for people around the world to celebrate women's history. While I believe every day should be women's history day, I also feel we should take advantage of the month of March to bring awareness to the lack of coverage about women's history on Wikipedia, and concerns about the gender gap in Wikipedia: only 9% of our active contributors are women. To mark Women's History Month, WikiWomen's History Month has been planned and events are taking place around the world in the Wikimedia movement to promote improving women's history on Wikipedia and inspire women to get involved in our projects.

As a Wikimedia Foundation community fellow, who is focusing on the gender gap, I wanted to learn more about what Wikipedians and Wikimedia supporters thought about the importance of women's voices being represented in the encyclopaedia. I spoke with three Wikipedians:

I also spoke with Valerie Aurora, co-founder of The Ada Initiative, a non-profit organization that supports women in open technology and culture.

Why is it important to improve Wikipedia's coverage of women's history? Why do you feel it's important for more women to contribute to Wikipedia?

  • Jgmikulay: Wikipedia is a gateway to knowledge for millions of people. It's important that women be involved in the construction of that knowledge. Also, as the encyclopedia continues to struggle for legitimacy in places like academia or cultural fields, it needs to become more representative.
  • Kippelboy: One of the five pillars of Wikipedia says " Wikipedia is written from a neutral point of view". If we strive for articles that document and explain the major points of view in a balanced and impartial manner, we need women to be represented in this project.
  • Whiteghost.ink: Women's history and women in history had been left out of the story for a long time in academia and literature and eventually a big effort had to be made to redress that before any interpretation of their contributions could be made. This was an historiographical problem. In the case of Wikipedia, interpretation is not relevant, but information is. Since now people are using Wikipedia as a source to get started on understanding things, having the perspective and "voice" of 50% of the population missing is equivalent to what happened before. That is, it doesn't help provide a true or balanced account of things if all this is missing and when interpretation (which may initially be built on a Wikipedia search) does happen, the interpretation is actually skewed. A new historiographical problem.
  • Valerie Aurora: Every person brings their own personal experience and knowledge to Wikipedia. What we know depends on who we are and the life we lead. Women have important and unique knowledge that is difficult to come by any other way. Losing the contributions of half the human race is against the fundamental principle of Wikipedia: free access to the sum of human knowledge.

Is anything missing from Wikipedia due to the lack of female participation? If so, what do you think is missing and how can that void be filled?

  • Jgmikulay: Many women have collaborative leadership styles that would be beneficial to the encyclopedia. The combative culture that prevails currently is a huge turn-off.
  • Whiteghost.ink: In my opinion, every organisation needs both sexes working together—the one balances out the other. All men together get terribly competitive and task focused and are highly likely to miss things in the rush to succeed. All women together are highly likely to start criticising each other and miss opportunities to succeed. These are generalisations, I know, but we need each other. And, even more difficult, we need to respect each others' approaches.
  • Valerie Aurora: The depth (or existence of) coverage of topics on Wikipedia is highly skewed by its contributor base in two ways. First, a contributor has to be interested enough in a topic to write an article about it, without being so interested in the topic as to have a conflict of interest. Second, if someone else notices an article they don't like, they can make a request for deletion, which is then voted on. Right now on English Wikipedia, about 90% of the people writing and voting on articles are men. This is how you end up with the absurdity of arguing whether a woman scientist is notable enough to deserve a Wikipedia article at the same time that women starring in pornography [who win a pornographic award] are automatically considered notable.

What type of subject matter would you like to see covered better on Wikipedia in relation to women's history?

  • Jgmikulay: Biographical articles on women in the art world, including artists, designers, curators, art historians and art administrators.
  • Whiteghost.ink: We need integrated women's perspectives in ordinary articles, just like we need integrated global perspectives. This is harder than including global perspectives because often an article will separate out different national perspectives in a list—for example, the use of a food type in different countries. We do not want that in articles vis-à-vis men's and women's perspectives. For example, on the whole, we don't want the article to say "men think this" and "women think that". My point is that integration is harder than lists like this and requires nuanced writing.
  • Valerie Aurora: Biographies of women, past and present, in any area. A recent study showed that while Wikipedia had more biographies of women overall, it was more likely to lack biographies of notable women than notable men. One of the ways to justify prejudice against women is to say, "There are no women X," where X is mathematicians, musicians, explorers, authors, etc. In reality, often many women have struggled through the barriers set up to prevent them from achieving their dreams, only to be forgotten, ignored, and dismissed. Write a biography of a woman today!

Will you be doing anything special related to women's history month and Wikipedia?

  • Jgmikulay: I'll be introducing about 25 women students at Alverno College to editing the encyclopedia.
  • Kippelboy: Yes, we are organizing an Edit-a-thon on March 24 at Figueres for improving the article of Àngels Santos Torroella. She is a 100 year old living surrealist painter badly represented in Spanish, Catalan and English Wikipedias.
  • Whiteghost.ink: There are various things connecting GLAM and Women's History Month that are "on the go" here down under.
  • Valerie Aurora: I'll be going to a local WikiWomen's History Month event in San Francisco at the Wikimedia Foundation and writing or updating women's biographies.

I believe these responses provide unique insight into the need for better women's coverage and women's participation in Wikipedia. I hope through this brief sharing of thoughts, you will have gained a deeper understanding of where women's history lies in Wikipedia, and the need for improvement about all areas related to women's history.

Want to be involved in WikiWomen's History Month? Learn more about an event in your city, or an online event through WikiProjects at the WikiWomen's History Month page. And be bold—think of the representation in the subjects that you contribute to on Wikipedia and related projects: how can you make Wikipedia a place to celebrate your heritage, the heritage of the women in your lives, and the heritage of all the world's knowledge.

Do you have an issue you think the community should be informed about but isn't? Pitch your proposals for features to The Signpost's editors in the newsroom.

Reader comments

2012-03-12

A look at new arbitrators

The Arbitration Committee is not a monolithic entity, but functions as a collective of individual editors serving as arbitrators. For the community to understand the important work the committee performs, it's important to understand the motivations and ideals of each individual arbitrator. Evaluating our newest arbitrators is the first step in such a process; each election brings new editors with different philosophies and ideas on how to make the work of the committee more efficient and effective.

On 1 January 2012, the English Wikipedia community elected four new arbitrators to serve on the committee. Our new Signpost series analyzing the work of arbitrators begins with a review of what each new member brings to our encyclopedia's most well-known body.

Related articles
Arbitration analysis

AGK

AGK has had a long tenure in Wikipedia Dispute Resolution. He was appointed to the Mediation Committee in May 2007, and continued to serve into 2010 when he was elected its chair by his fellow mediators. In addition to that experience in directly handling disputes between editors, he held a community seat on the Audit Subcommittee before his election to the full committee. With this background, it's interesting to see how he has reacted to the pressure-cooker environment that is ArbCom.

AGK was tasked with drafting a proposed decision in the contentious Muhammad images case. In that proposal, he introduced several new ideas for principles, as he indicated he would in his election statement. He proposed everything from the fetishisation of policy to specific principles regarding the uncensored nature of Wikipedia. AGK says that he "takes a harder line on principles than my colleagues do". He notes his disapproval of "banal restatements of simple policy", instead preferring principles that "demonstrate the committee's thinking in relation to the dispute [at hand]".

The proposed decision process in Muhammad images is unique in another regard – the posting of a summary of the dispute as a means to initiate new discussion on the workshop page itself. This move was "unprecedented", but received "a good response, especially to the mere fact [it] was posted". In AGK's mind, this avoided the sense that the committee's decision "appeared out of thin air [to] 'show our working'".

In light of the fact that AGK drafted the proposed decision by himself, it's interesting to see how he evaluates cases: "I use the evidence page to evaluate conduct issues with specific editors, and to get a feel for what the disputants view as the issues in a case ... we try to look beyond the question of 'who has thrown the most tantrums' to 'why is this dispute not resolved, and what can be done to bring it to a close'." He stresses that this deeper-looking inquiry is sometimes difficult on more technical cases, but that it held true for the decision he had to draft.

We can do more [than] slap wrists ... we can give useful advice for resolving disagreements about content.

—AGK

It's clear from an analysis of the cases that AGK has worked on, and his method of voting on cases, that he takes a view of cases as important for the long-term guidance for the community. His proposition of asking the community to handle content disputes, as a direct request from the committee, supports the idea that he will continue to use a bottom-up approach in future cases. This indicates that AGK may be likely to focus on how to help a conflict rather than trying to craft a decision around the sanction of specific editors: "we can do more [than] slap wrists ... we can give useful advice for resolving disagreements about content."

Courcelles

Courcelles opened his candidacy statement in the December election with the proclamation "editors that care about this project deserve an ArbCom that is available, active, and experienced". To that end, he submitted his name for consideration. Before his election to ArbCom, Courcelles served on the Audit Subcommittee and was confirmed as a permanent checkuser and oversighter. He has listed as his most important focus the content of Wikipedia, citing his contributions to 23 featured lists and assistance in the improvement of two featured articles. Thus, Courcelles' take on work on the Arbitration Committee is unique.

Within three months, Courcelles has already made a mark on committee decisions. In TimidGuy, his analysis of whether to ban an editor or merely to remove administrative privileges was found sufficiently compelling for his colleagues to approve his proposal to ban then-admin Will Beback. As Courcelles explained, "A mere desysop here exemplifies the 'Super Mario Problem' where editors with no advanced permissions get banned, and those with such permissions merely get them taken away. This is unacceptable, and the conduct here is so bad that it, in my mind, calls for this."

Along with Courcelles' discussions of remedies, a visible trend in his participation in decision debates has been an attempt to clarify principles and findings of fact when voting on them. For instance, in the Civility enforcement case, Courcelles told fellow arbitrators that "the expectation isn't, in my mind, so much that every editor has to raise the level from the comment before theirs, but that behaviour that actively lowers the discussion towards mud-slinging is not acceptable". This may be a sign that Courcelles will strive to find balanced and equitable principles when evaluating disputes and deciding cases.


Arbitration Committee
2012 Term Cases

Hersfold

Hersfold is the only newly elected arbitrator who can't be considered entirely new: he served on the committee for the first five months of 2010, before his real-life workload forced him to give up those responsibilities. However, he promised during the December election to "fully dedicate [his] time to ArbCom" – a promise that has been fulfilled with his active participation on all recent cases.

His most recent activity was on the Civility enforcement case. During the debate on the proposed decision, Hersfold held to a steadfast view that a harsh remedy was required, declaring that "an editor who thinks such behavior is acceptable is incompatible with this project". While this position was bounded to the case at hand, this may suggest a trend in the way Hersfold approaches cases. Hersfold himself says "usually [I'll] stand my ground on an issue until it's clearly demonstrated I'm in the wrong". But of course, he recognizes that with the diversity of the arbitrators, "there's always some disagreement".

As to the way he thinks through a case, Hersfold explains that "it helps to build a bit of a timeline from the evidence; ... to find a truly effective solution, we have to consider the full background of the dispute and involved editors". In a slightly contrasting view from that of new arbitrator AGK, Hersfold says that principles "really just fall into place on their own ... [they] echo the expected conduct that wasn't followed, and findings summarize the time timeline built from the evidence". His goal is always to work through that timeline of the conflict as a means of seeing which editors have been acting inappropriately. In this way, a future analysis of cases could suggest that Hersfold uses cases as a means to sanction unruly editors rather than as a basis for broad principle-building.

SilkTork

SilkTork announced in his statement for candidacy in the December elections that he would view ArbCom cases "holistically", to "see the relationship between the parts that make up the whole, which sometimes gives a new perspective". While SilkTork did not serve on any special committee or hold any functionary position before his election, he had been an active Wikipedian administrator with work on two featured articles and a collection of nearly 20 good articles.

In one of the year's new cases, Betacommand 3, SilkTork was very active in trying to craft a remedy that was explicit in its terms and balanced in its nature. On the proposed decision page, a great effort was made to keep Betacommand on the project with the imposition of strong restrictions, rather than a ban. When the committee moved to ban the editor, SilkTork joined five other arbitrators to oppose. He noted that "if one doesn't agree [with a proposal], that can be awkward. I hadn't expected that". Despite this occasional element of disagreement, SilkTork emphasized that "the cases we accept are complex ... if one does disagree with the decision the drafter has taken, then we have the option of further discussion".

For SilkTork, the distinction in remedies relies a great deal on sifting through the evidence. As an example, he notes that in the TimidGuy case "my initial impression was that Will Beback had been over-enthusiastic but well meaning...[but] reading the evidence...a ban was a reasonable outcome, and that's what I agreed with." This emphasis on the evidence phase creates a need for SilkTork to investigate the patterns of conflict in a case: "I will read something in the workshop, and this may lead me to investigate a particular bit of edit history...what is common is to have several Firefox tabs open at the same time, and this may be 20 or 30 tabs".

This will last, and these early days will be remembered.

—SilkTork

Analysis of SilkTork's activity reveals not only a fact-driven case-handling method, but also sheds light on his feelings on the role of the Arbitration Committee in the context of the broader community. He was hesitant to support a principle that "In certain circumstances, the Committee may overturn or reduce a sanction imposed by the community." However, as the arbitrator himself explained, "I feel that the current Committee is very aware of ArbCom's relationship with the community and that we act within policy and not above it".

Despite holding the very focused role of arbitrator (which he notes is a very tiring job), SilkTork remains very passionate about the project for the value it has in and of itself. "This will last", he says, "and these early days will be remembered."

Moving forward

The Arbitration Committee conducts its work with an eye towards the sustainability of the project as a whole. The decisions it crafts are reviewed in meticulous detail to ensure that the standards announced by that small group of editors will be an effective guide for the rest of the encyclopedia. Yet in crafting a decision, each individual arbitrator has their own ideals, principles, and even methods of analyzing a case. These are distinctions with a difference, and fully understanding that fact will serve to foster greater understanding of the committee as a whole.

The Signpost would like to thank all the arbitrators who responded to the interview questions; full responses can be found here. If you have a suggestion for a future 'Arbitration analysis' article, feel free to drop a note on the writer's talk page.

Reader comments

2012-03-12

Sue Gardner tackles the funds, and the terms of use update nears implementation

Controversial content debates resumed

The far-reaching controversial content debate of 2010–2011 was resumed on March 1, 2012, when MZMcBride asked about the current state of the image filter software on foundation-l. Two Foundation trustees, Phoebe Ayers and Kat Walsh, declared during the subsequent discussion that in retrospect they felt it was wrong to adopt the controversial content resolution approved in May 2011 ( Signpost coverage) and that the board was still split over the issue.

It was confirmed that the development of the tool called the personal image filter and subject to a global survey in August 2011 ( Signpost coverage) has not yet started, and Walsh explicitly supported "rescinding" at least parts of the underlying board decision.

The controversial debate on the Foundation mailing list was wide-ranging, encompassing the re-iteration of well-known positions on the socio-cultural aspects of how the issue relates to the current chapter-selection process of two WMF board members as well as a new proposal on Commons aiming to improve image searching.

The debate arose in response to a FoxNews.com story at the end of February 2012, and quickly spread beyond Wikimedia. Larry Sanger, co-founder of Wikipedia, joined in on March 7 on his blog, saying that the problems he reported in a letter to the FBI in 2010 ( Signpost coverage) were still unresolved and urging the WMF to ignore community opposition and institute editorial controls. Discussion on the matter also took place at Wikipedia Review.

There is currently an open proposal before the board to vote on whether to uphold the original request for an image-hiding feature. The executive director, Sue Gardner, will take direction from the board on the matter. However, Ayers stated that the issue is off the table for now, "due to the more time-sensitive and generally all-consuming financial discussions of the past couple of months."

Final Gardner recommendations published

On March 9, WMF executive director Sue Gardner presented to the board her final recommendations on fundraising and the dissemination of those funds.

A steady stream of finance-related position papers and posts from Wikimedia entities on Meta peaked on Sunday with Sue Gardner's release of her final recommendations on how to reform major fundraising and fund distribution activities, which were presented to the board on March 9.

With regard to fund distribution, the recommendations are that the decision-making process concerning how to arrange WMF non-core activities, as well as funds to be received by other Wikimedia entities (such as chapters) and individual volunteers, should be opened up to community participation.

According to the office hours conducted on March 12, it's not yet clear what "core" means in concrete terms. Gardner provided a general definition, stating that "Core does not mean 'the rock-bottom costs of operating the sites if we were in serious financial difficulties.' Core means the costs of operating the sites."

To better facilitate a community involvement, the Foundation would establish a new body, run by volunteers and called the Funds Dissemination Committee (FDC), to advise the board on how to distribute funds raised via projects such as the English Wikipedia. The committee would be supported by Foundation staff, and a body of funds would be excluded from the FDC as an "operating reserve" to ensure smooth sailing for the Foundation in case of future financial difficulties.

On fundraising, Gardner recommends that the WMF process all funds received through its project sites according to nine guiding principles, including transparency, efficiency, and accordance with the movement mission. These principles—taken from a 2011 board resolution—would be applied to all fundraising activities regardless of area of activity. Fundraising recommendation 3 represents a shift from the draft version, allowing for the continuation of chapter activities during the annual fundraiser on a case by case basis.

Gardner's text follows other Wikimedia entity position papers and posts on Meta over the last weeks. All four chapters that currently process payments, ( France, Germany, Switzerland, and the UK), posted their positions on the issues over the last week, reaffirming their preference for processing funds as national entities.

This was the second round of chapter position papers this year, following a January–February rush where the German chapter published a paper, which was reviewed by an association of editors of the Catalan Wikipedia and its sister project ( Amical Viquipèdia), arguing in favor of national chapter-driven processing. The Italy and UK chapters followed shortly after with statements of their own, as did the Regional Cooperation Initiative for Ibero-America ( Iberocoop).

The next stage will consist of deliberations within the board, which is expected to make a decision at the Berlin conference at the end of March. Everyone interested in contributing at this point can post notes and positions at the related discussion page.

Terms of use update

A board resolution formally approving the forthcoming update of the terms of use was published on March 6. The vote wraps up a deliberation process under way since September 2011, when the Foundation legal team presented an initial draft for community deliberation. Subsequent community debate made this the most heavily collaborated terms of use of any major website. The move aims to make roles and rules more transparent to new editors, as well as bringing the terms in line with those of other websites, such as Mozilla and Creative Commons, in increasing legal protections for the Foundation.

The text was modified more than 200 times during the community review proceedings, which ended in December 2011, and embodies a major shift in the nature of the terms of use. The current version is essentially an agreement on licensing, while its replacement is designed to be more comprehensive and transparent on several issues.

While licensing provisions have been preserved, the updated version includes new aspects like a community-formulated global ban for cross-wiki violations on the project sites, as well as clarifications on topics like legal protection, community responsibilities, and roles. The update summary in the communication sent to the Board of Trustees by general counsel Geoff Brigham has been posted on Meta.

The updated terms of use will not officially go into effect until after a formal notice period, to be decided upon by the Foundation's legal department, but expected to last at least 30 days.

Brief notes

New mockup for "list" view for New Page Triage
  • Core Contest revival: Well-known English Wikipedian Casliber has revived the Core Contest concept, originally run in November and December 2007 by Danny. The new contest aims to cause a "flash mob" of improvements to lackluster vital articles in the form of "a short, sharp snappy three week contest with some Amazon vouchers or some such as prizes." It will run from 00:01 March 10 to 23:59 March 31 Sydney time, and after a two-week judging period the editors with the most impressive improvements will receive vouchers as their rewards.
  • New Page Triage initiative progresses: The talkpage of the New Page Triage project this week saw candid discussion of the initiative's relationship with the Wikimedia Foundation from Oliver Keyes, the foundation's community liaison for product development. Keyes sought input at the Administrators noticeboard and is publishing a regular newsletter on the initiative's progress; so far, over 80 editors have signed-up.
  • Article Feedback Tool: With Version 5 deployment and development ongoing, discussion continues on the project's talk page. Inviting comments on its current plans, the Foundation has asked about unaddressed community concerns as well as potential design ideas and improvements. A Foundation newsletter on the topic has also been created. Stay tuned to The Signpost in the coming weeks for a comprehensive report on the progress of New Page Triage, the Article Feedback Tool, and other momentous engineering developments.
  • Teahouse builds steam: Metrics for the Teahouse's first week reveal that "the overall count isn't that impressive yet, but in general we're seeing a steady acceleration in the number of newbies per day." Those wishing to follow the initiative more closely may wish to sign up for its newsletter.
    The Foundation's monthly metrics meeting, conducted on March 1, for the month of February.
  • Monthly report released: The Foundation has released its monthly report for February. Highlights include the creation of the Legal and Community Advocacy department, the Teahouse project launch, and the deployment of MediaWiki 1.19. Following the precedent set by last month's report, the foundation has recorded and released its monthly metrics video, and the report has been translated into several languages.
  • Death of an editor: The death of senior Wikipedian Dr. Steven Rubenstein – known to fellow editors as Slrubenstein – was announced at the administrators' noticeboard on Saturday last. Dr Rubenstein was the Director of the Research Institute of Latin American Studies at University of Liverpool's school of Cultures, Languages and Area Studies. Following the guidelines for deceased Wikipedians, his account's administrator privileges were revoked, and an entry is expected to be added at Wikipedia:Deceased Wikipedians once details have been confirmed.
  • Bangla Wikipedia Unconference 2012: Images from the Bangla Wikipedia Unconference 2012 in Chittagong have been uploaded to Commons. The event, hosted by the Independent University Bangladesh, was supported by Wikimedia Bangladesh and attended by more than 300 people, including the State Minister for Science and Technology – who urged the nation's youth to edit Bangla Wikipedia – and intellectuals such as Muhammad Zafar Iqbal.
  • Wikidata: Wikimedia Deutschland's new community communications manager for Wikidata, Lydia Pintscher, has introduced the communications road map for the project, the goal of which is "to create something similar to Wiki[media] Commons for data", starting with an interwiki repository. The initiative's current focus is on collecting input, creating resources "to explain the project better", setting up infrastructure, and working on a structured input collection system. (Those excited by the potential of the project will be interested to know that the Signpost will be running a special report in April, covering the topic in more detail.)
  • Chapters Committee appointments completed: The Chapters Committee has announced the end of its elections and the appointment of five new members. Galileo Vidoni, Lodewijk Gelauff, Maria Sefidari, Bengt Oberger, and Tomasz Kozłowski are replacing outgoing members Nathan Carter, Austin Hair, and Vladimir Medeyko; in addition, Delphine Ménard has been appointed as a non-voting adviser.
  • Wikimania 2012 call for participation deadline on Sunday: March 18 is the deadline for submitting a talk, panel, workshop or other session proposal for Wikimania 2012. The organizing team is seeking session proposals on wiki culture and community, technical topics, sister projects, third-party wikis and collaborative projects, wikis in the public sector, GLAM-wiki, education initiatives, and other topics related to Wikipedia.
  • Milestones: The following Wikipedia projects reached milestones this week: the Vietnamese Wikipedia has reached 1,000,000 total pages, the Finnish Wikipedia has reached 50 administrators, and the Sorani Wikipedia has reached 100,000 page edits.

    Reader comments

2012-03-12

Britannica runs out of print as Jimmy Wales anointed UK transparency tsar

End of an era as Britannica ceases print

An increasingly rare sight: bookshelves stocked with the Fifteenth Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, 2002

In an announcement fittingly made through a blog post on its website, the management of the Encyclopaedia Britannica revealed that the longest-published English language encyclopedia in the history of the world would cease its print edition after 244 years. The encyclopaedia is far from over, with approximately half a million household subscribers to its $70 per annum digital edition, which surpassed print as the company's primary revenue source in 2006 (and will be free to access from Britannica.com for a week-long trial to mark the occasion), but the announcement marks the end of an era in knowledge curation and dissemination.

In The New York Times, Julie Bosman waxed lyrical about the totemic power the books once possessed: "In the 1950s, having the Encyclopaedia Britannica on the bookshelf was akin to a station wagon in the garage or a black-and-white Zenith in the den, a possession coveted for its usefulness and as a goalpost for an aspirational middle class." She highlighted that "only 8,000 sets of the 2010 edition have been sold", a paltry amount in comparison to the 120,000 sets sold in the United States in one year two decades before. The Daily Telegraph lamented "The sad death of the Encyclopaedia Britannica", the Vancouver Sun gave a nostalgic retrospective – as did The Independent – CNN made the case for "Why Encyclopaedia Britannica mattered" (citing concerns that the Internet could be disabled by Chinese hackers) and Los Angeles Times, NPR, The Guardian and the Wall Street Journal also contributed their post-mortems.

The comprehensiveness, diversity and timeliness of web content, particularly that of Wikipedia, was widely cited as the nail in the coffin. Poynter highlighted the speed and intensity with which Wikipedia editors had responded to the development in the crowdsourced encyclopaedia's own article on the subject, with TIME asking "is Wikipedia our new lord and master?", a prospect at which the Daily Mail fretted, declaring that Britannica's heir "encourages only the most blinkered voyage of discovery".

Jimmy Wales, who remarked of the reference work in a 2004 interview that "I would view them as a competitor, except that I think they will be crushed out of existence within 5 years", highlighted the dissent of Dan Lewis from the consensus pointing the finger of blame for Britannica's demise at Wikipedia, arguing that it was Microsoft Encarta, a CD-based competitor that rose to prominence in the 1990s, that first heralded its change in fortunes.

"The Sum of Knowledge": 1913 advertisement for the celebrated Eleventh Edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica, which provided the seed for many Wikipedia articles

Although he had warm words for his erstwhile colleagues, former Britannica.com editor Charlie Madigan blasted the corporate management of the venerable institution for what he saw as their questionable ethics and narrow, profit-driven focus in recent years. Calling the abandonment of its print edition "inevitable", he expressed his disenchantment with the enterprise and his involvement with it: "I had high hopes for the idea of giving away knowledge. Unfortunately, that wasn’t what it was about. It was all about monetizing information and selling the Britannica brand." As part of a roundup at The New York Times – another print institution struggling to come to terms with the digital era – Wikimedia Foundation trustee and Signpost alumna Phoebe Ayers had this to say:

Jimbo Wales: tsar of transparency

Jimmy Wales, the arch-Wikipedian whom the British government hopes will show them the light on innovation and transparency.

The Daily Telegraph revealed this week that Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales was to advise the British government in an unpaid advisory capacity on improving innovation and transparency. The announcement came (appropriately) via tweet from the South by Southwest festival, and was quickly picked up in the national and Internet tech press, with stories in Financial Times The Daily Mail, Computer World UK, TechWeekEurope, Information Age, Public Service, and Business Insider.

The announcement came a week after Wales had given the opening presentation at the Financial Times digital media conference in London. His activities at the conference included disavowing that the Wikimedia Foundation would be adopting a more overtly political footing following the SOPA wars (as Betabeat asked "Why Isn’t Wikipedia Blacking Out Over ACTA?"), advising journalists to avoid citing Wikipedia, warning that for the encyclopaedia to collaborate with Facebook would compromise the essentially private nature of its consultation, and cautioning that the secret of socially mediated content dissemination remained elusive.

The remit of Wales' new advisory role includes all government departments, though his audience will be bureaucrats rather than their political masters. Despite this, the International Business Times interpreted the move as Wales' grand entrance into politics (perhaps forgivably overlooking the burgeoning Draft Jimmy Wales for Senate movement). Andrew Orlowski of The Register speculated that the appointment "may prove to be a political gift" to the opposition Labour Party, describing it as "rather like putting foxes in charge of hen security" in light of the opacity of Wikipedia's internal bureaucracy, which Orlowski characterised as dominated by ideologically motivated pseudonymous apparatchiks. Techeye meanwhile wondered whether Wales would take to doling out " Malcolm Tucker-style grillings" to the civil servants.

WebProNews contributor Shawn Hess, having sifted through Twitter reactions to the announcement, remarked "Sounds to me like Wales is a welcome addition. It definately [ sic] helps to have an experienced entreprenuar [ sic] of his caliber onboard. I can’t wait to see what change he can bring about. When the public can be heard before legislation is passed, things are bound to change for the better." His colleague Jonathan Fisher couldn't resist the opportunity to snark that Wales was planning to "present all advice in the form of "Personal Appeal" banner ads":

It was a bumper week for Wales, after VentureBeat had reported that his for-profit wiki-empire Wikia had overtaken competitor IGN in the Comscore rankings to become the largest network of gaming sites in the world, accruing 26 million pageviews per month.

Unparliamentary conduct as MPs bios scrubbed

Wikimedia UK chief executive Jon Davies, who took advantage of the revelations about edits from parliament to launch a mischievous outreach effort to recruit MPs as editors

An analysis conducted by the Bureau of Investigative Journalism has found evidence of thousands of edits to Wikipedia originating from within the British Houses of Parliament. The edits were found through tracking the contributions of two IP addresses, 194.60.38.198 ( talk · contribs · WHOIS) and 194.60.38.10 ( talk · contribs · WHOIS), which route the traffic from users of the Parliamentary network. Among the findings were that the articles on almost one out of every six Members of Parliament (MPs) had been edited by users of the network, and that in many cases, these changes were attempts at ameliorating negative biographical content concerning the 2009 United Kingdom parliamentary expenses scandal. The Bureau singled out the entry on Joan Ryan (a parliamentarian who resigned in the wake of the affair) as having been successfully scrubbed of any mention of expenses-related wrongdoing; Wikipedians have since updated it with details of both the scandal and the attempted cover-up. The Bureau also found plenty of innocuous edits, including the listing of a sitting MP as a notable DJ, finessing of a passage discussing the relative merits of characterising Pringles as crisps or cakes, and the correction of a misstatement of the full name of a former Mayor of London as "Kenneth Robert Livingstone Twatface".

The news caught the attention of the mainstream media, with reports in The Independent, The Daily Telegraph, and The Daily Mail. Contacted for comment, chief executive of Wikimedia UK Jon Davies drily remarked that "We would welcome any MPs who want to become editors".

Meanwhile, the BBC recounted new political forecasting techniques developed by Massachusetts Institute of Technology researcher Peter Gloor using analyses of social media including Wikipedia edits. Gloor and his team followed the activities of the small group of highly active Wikipedians, their levels of respect and areas of focus. The methodology was used to successfully predict the outcome of Republican Party presidential primaries in the United States, and has been incorporated by The Huffington Post's election tracker. British parliamentarians may want to take note.

In brief

  • Go, GoDaddy, go: The Wikimedia Foundation's decision to sever ties with registrar GoDaddy in the wake of the SOPA wars (see "Technology report") caught the eye of CNET News and Techcrunch. Redditors, who had been pushing strongly for the move, even going so far as to promise donations if GoDaddy was dumped, reacted favourably.
  • Brand value: The Brisbane Times reports that Australian web users prefer Wikipedia over social networking sites for brand information—news that may well encourage opportunists to inundate the encyclopaedia with yet more self-promotion and hagiography.
  • Revenge by defamation?: Ars Technica reports on a defamation case in which a former employee is sued for making unflattering alterations to a company's Wikipedia article. In the writer's opinion, in determining damages the judge should consider how long the alleged defamatory material remained before it was reverted and how many page views occurred in the meantime.
  • The sum of all plagiarism: Webpronews staff writer Jonathan Fisher had a note of gallows optimism about the Wikimedia Foundation's Education Program: "Long derided by professors as an inaccurate and unacademic information source, Wikipedia might be able to garner a degree of academic respect (see what I did there?) if the program meets with continued success. At the very least, the students of tomorrow might be plagiarizing better-informed content." For in-depth coverage of the program, see The Signpost's incipient Education report.

    Reader comments

2012-03-12

Nothing changes as long discussions continue


In brief
Discussions of note
Discussions covered in the main body of the discussion report are not listed here.

Editor's note: As I've been away most of the week, we will present a different take on the discussion report this edition. Below is an analysis of the dispute resolution and discussion system that we have, looking at the advantages and the disadvantages.

Where the discussions are


The process today

The English Wikipedia is in some ways becoming better at dealing with issues, with the creation of more and more specialized dispute resolution forums and centralized discussion areas. Areas where topics are being discussed include the village pump, centralized discussion, and the community portal; a watchlist notice is also being used to draw editors' notice. Without a doubt, there are plenty of ways to get the attention of editors who may be interested in discussion.

On the other hand, with the proliferation of these specialized forums and areas, it becomes increasingly difficult for editors to find discussions that may be relevant to them, and to ensure their opinion is heard, because of the large number of pages that need to be checked.

It also seems that it's taking longer for disputes to be resolved and discussions to be closed. Perhaps, because of the double-sided process that we have, the discussions drag out because there are so many options to consider.

In brief

2012-03-12

WikiProject Women's History

WikiProject news
News in brief
Submit your project's news and announcements for next week's WikiProject Report at the Signpost's WikiProject Desk.
Clio, the muse of history
We Can Do It! poster from World War II
Betty Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique

This week, we interviewed WikiProject Women's History, which celebrated its first birthday last month. Despite the project's youth, it has assembled a collection of 82 pieces of Featured content, over 100 Good Articles, and two task forces dealing with women in World War I and women and technology. In honor of Women's History Month, the project has started a month-long drive involving collaborations between several WikiProjects, with real-life meetups scheduled in cities around the globe. We interviewed Penny Richards, OttawaAC, SarahStierch, and Ipigott.

What motivated you to join WikiProject Women's History? Have you been involved in any other projects related to history or gender studies?

Penny Richards: I'm a research scholar with UCLA's Center for the Study of Women, and I've worked on editorial boards for several print encyclopedias, mostly contributing articles about women. This project just seemed like a good opportunity to learn more about how to contribute to Wikipedia.
OttawaAC: I started editing after reading some newspaper interviews given by Sue Gardner and Jimmy Wales where they mentioned the gender gap among Wikipedia editors, and discussed some research that had shown a relative lack of articles focused on women's issues in general. It occurred to me that a lot of young people who routinely use Wikipedia might jump to the conclusion that if a topic isn't already covered in Wikipedia, that it must not be important at all—that is a scary possibility as far as I'm concerned. I have an undergraduate honours degree in History and had studied approaches to researching people and events that have been largely left out of conventional history books, such as women, blue collar workers, and so on, so reading those interviews piqued my interest whereas I hadn't previously given any thought to writing Wikipedia articles myself.
SarahStierch: I joined WikiProject Women's History after working on biographies for the National Women's History Project, which I stumbled across through my involvement in WikiProject Feminism. I enjoy writing biographies and many happen to be about women, so it only seemed natural to join!

WikiProject Women's History is home to 79 pieces of Featured material and over 100 Good Articles. Have you contributed to any of these articles? What are some challenges editors face when improving articles about women's history to FA or GA status?

SarahStierch: I rewrote and expanded Louise Nevelson, and with the help of other users it was awarded GA status. This is one of two GAs I've ever had (the other is about male artist Wadsworth Jarrell). The GA process can be rather tiring, so I don't make it my end all with articles. I appreciate the efforts of those who do, and those who review FAs and GAs, however. I'm a researcher by trade, so perhaps my experience in writing content related to women's subjects is a bit easier than for others. One struggle can be the lack of free resources online, unless you have access to researcher databases like JSTOR. If there is a gender gap on Wikipedia, there is most likely a gender gap in content available online from reliable sources.

The majority of the project's Featured Articles are biographies. Why has the promotion of non-biographical articles lagged behind biographical articles? What can be done to increase the project's Featured Articles about movements, organizations, artwork, culture, and other historical topics?

OttawaAC: That's a good question, and I wish I had an answer. It may be that editors try to relate to women's history on a personal level, so they gravitate towards biographies. Writing about a movement or an organization often involves more difficult research, since reliable sources on women's history topics can be hard to track down. I'm optimistic that when Wikipedia introduces a less technically challenging editing tool, more editors with a background in history, sociology, cultural studies, and so on, will join in and start writing some interesting material.

The project includes some fictional and mythological characters within its scope. How do these articles relate to the larger goals of WikiProject Women's History? What criteria are used to determine inclusion of an article about a fictional or mythological character into the project?

Penny Richards: There are certainly precedents for this: The Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Women (Edinburgh University Press, 2006) includes entries on mythological and fictional women, for example. I think of coinage, and statuary, where it's not unusual to find real men but allegorical women depicted. (In US history, think George Washington vs. Columbia; the Lincoln Monument vs. the Statue of Liberty.) Women artists and writers have storied representations of their experiences when it wasn't acceptable to be more direct in their statements; the lines between fiction and memoir become a little blurry. (Again from US history, think of works like The Yellow Wall-Paper or The Awakening). So a women's history project will often include cultural depictions, to capture all that.
OttawaAC: Female figures that are cultural icons are capable of developing historic significance, whether they are fictitious, figures from folklore, mythology, or even religious figures like goddesses and saints. They become cultural icons by representing what society idealizes or denigrates in women. Rosie the Riveter has been held up as a positive role model for young women and so she is an influential, and therefore historically notable, modern feminist icon.

Since March is Women's History Month, does the project have any special plans? Is WikiProject Women's History collaborating with any other projects to improve articles in March? How can editors who are not currently affiliated with one of these projects get in on the festivities?

Ipigott: Thanks to alerts from SarahStierch at the beginning of February, many WikiProjects have been informed of the opportunity to collaborate. One of the most active has been WikiProject Architecture, where some 40 new articles on women architects have already been written, many of them directly relevant to women's history.
SarahStierch: Myself and a group of editors are planning events around the world related to women's history month; you can learn more here. I'm hoping this will be able to blossom into something much larger in the future, related to not only writing about women's history, but mainly a larger editing event that encourages women's participation around the world in Wikimedia projects. The link I just provided for WikiWomen's History Month is a great starting point to find inspiration, or connect with your favorite WikiProject and start something there, like for example, WikiProject Architecture has done.

Anything else you'd like to add?

OttawaAC: I'm thrilled to see the increase in Women's History articles in recent months. On the other hand, I'd also like to see the women's angle get more coverage in history articles that have a more general focus, too.


Next week, we'll check out another Wikipedia. Until then, Czech out the archive.

Reader comments

2012-03-12

Extinct humans, birds, and Birdman

This edition covers content promoted from 4 to 10 March 2012.
This image of the obverse of the Washington quarter (from the new featured article on the US coin), shows the quarter as it was originally designed by John Flanagan in 1932; it has been modified since.

Featured articles

A fruit body of the bolete fungus, from the new featured article Boletus frostii. These mushrooms can be recognized by their dark red sticky caps, the red pores, the network-like pattern of the stem, and the bluing reaction to tissue injury.
Modern ruins of Ludlow Castle. The new featured article Pain fitzJohn explains that he gained control over this castle through marriage in 1115.
From the newly featured list of National Hockey League players born in the United Kingdom, Owen Nolan won two Olympic medals for Canada despite being born in Ireland.
The newly featured picture is of the Salvin's Albatross, Thalassarche salvini, a medium sized black and white albatross that ranges across the Southern Ocean.
Original – Five-cent US postal currency, first issue, featuring Thomas Jefferson. The note is 2.5 × 1.75 inches (63.5 × 44.5 mm), from the newly featured picture.

Six featured articles were promoted this week:

  • Washington quarter ( nom), by Wehwalt. The Washington quarter is the present quarter dollar or 25-cent piece issued by the United States Mint. As the United States prepared to celebrate the 1932 bicentennial of the birth of its first president, George Washington, members of the bicentennial committee established by Congress sought a Washington half dollar. Instead, Congress permanently replaced the Standing Liberty quarter, requiring that a depiction of Washington appear on the obverse of the new coin. The new silver quarters, designed by sculptor John Flanagan, entered circulation on August 1, 1932 (above). Since 1999, the original eagle reverse has not been used; instead that side of the quarter has commemorated the 50 states, the nation's other jurisdictions, and National Park Service sites—the last as part of the America the Beautiful Quarters series, which will continue until 2021.
  • Boletus frostii ( nom), by Sasata. Boletus frostii (right), commonly known as Frost's bolete or the apple bolete, is a bolete fungus first described scientifically in 1874. A member of the Boletaceae family, the mushrooms produced by the fungus have tubes and pores instead of gills on the underside of their caps. Boletus frostii is distributed in the eastern United States from Maine to Georgia and Arizona, and south to Mexico and Costa Rica. A mycorrhizal species, its fruit bodies are typically found growing near hardwood trees, especially oak.
  • Voluntary Human Extinction Movement ( nom), by Mark Arsten and Mitch Ames. The Voluntary Human Extinction Movement (VHEMT) is an environmental movement that calls for all people to abstain from reproduction to cause the gradual voluntary extinction of mankind. VHEMT supports human extinction primarily to prevent environmental degradation, stating that a decrease in the human population would prevent a significant amount of man-made human suffering. The extinctions of non-human species and the scarcity of resources required by humans are cited as evidence of the harm caused by human overpopulation.
  • Ferugliotherium ( nom), by Ucucha. Ferugliotherium is a genus of fossil mammals from the Campanian and/or Maastrichtian (Late Cretaceous, around 70 million years ago) of Argentina in the family Ferugliotheriidae. It contains a single species, Ferugliotherium windhauseni, which was first described in 1986. Originally interpreted as a member of Multituberculata – an extinct group of small, rodent-like mammals – on the basis of a single brachydont (low crowned) molar, it was recognized as related to the hypsodont (high-crowned) Sudamericidae after the discovery of additional material in the early 1990s.
  • Pain fitzJohn ( nom), by Ealdgyth. Pain fitzJohn (sometimes Payn fitzJohn, Payn FitzJohn, or Pagan fitzJohn died 1137) was an Anglo-Norman nobleman and administrator, one of King Henry I of England's "new men", who owed their positions and wealth to the king. Pain's family originated in Normandy, but he appears to have spent most of his career in England and the Welsh Marches. A son of a minor nobleman, he rose through ability to become an important royal official during Henry's reign. In 1115 he was rewarded with marriage to an heiress, thereby gaining control of the town of Ludlow and its castle (right). After King Henry's death in 1135 Pain supported Henry's nephew, King Stephen. In July 1137 Pain was ambushed by the Welsh and killed as he was leading a relief expedition to the garrison at Carmarthen.
  • Alexis Bachelot ( nom), by Mark Arsten and Livitup. Alexis Bachelot (1796–1837) was a Roman Catholic priest best known for his tenure as the first Prefect Apostolic of the Sandwich Islands; he led the first permanent Catholic mission to the Kingdom of Hawaii, arriving in 1827. Although he had expected the approval of then Hawaiian King Kamehameha II, he learned upon arrival that Kamehameha II had died and a new government hostile towards Catholic missionaries had been installed. Bachelot, however, was able to convert and then quietly minister to a small group of Hawaiians for four years before being deported in 1831 on the orders of Kaʻahumanu, the Kuhina Nui (a position similar to queen regent) of Hawaii.

Featured lists

Five featured lists were promoted this week:

  • List of National Hockey League players born in the United Kingdom ( nom), by Harrias. The National Hockey League (NHL) is a major professional ice hockey league which operates in Canada and the United States. Since its inception in 1917–18, 49 players born within the current borders of the United Kingdom have taken part. Of the 49 players, 21 are from England, 21 from Scotland, 4 from Northern Ireland and 3 from Wales. Steve Thomas and Owen Nolan (right) played over 1,000 regular season games, while Thomas and Steve Smith are the only ones to have appeared in over 100 playoff games.
  • List of Vanderbilt Commodores head football coaches ( nom), by Patriarca12. The Vanderbilt Commodores college football team represents Vanderbilt University in the East Division of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The Commodores compete as part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision. The program has had 27 head coaches since it began play during the 1890 season. Since December 2010, James Franklin has served as Vanderbilt's head coach. The team has played more than 1,150 games over 121 seasons of Vanderbilt football.
  • List of Malmö FF seasons ( nom), by Reckless182. Malmö Fotbollförening, commonly called Malmö FF, is a Swedish professional association football club based in Malmö, whose first team play in the highest tier of Swedish football, Allsvenskan, as of the 2012 season. Malmö FF was founded on 24 February 1910. The pinnacle of the club's history came in 1979, when, as finalists in both the European Cup and Intercontinental Cup, Malmö FF were ranked as one of the strongest clubs in the world. As of 2012, Malmö FF have played 102 seasons, 89 of which have been spent within the Swedish league system.
  • List of scheduled monuments in Maidstone ( nom), by DavidCane. There are 27 scheduled monuments in Maidstone, Kent, England. In the United Kingdom, a scheduled monument is an archaeological site or historic building of "national importance" that has been given protection against unauthorised change by being placed on a scheduled monuments list, defined in the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 and the National Heritage Act 1983. The borough of Maidstone is a local government district in the English county of Kent. The monuments range in date from a neolithic standing stone to a tiny 18th-century mortuary, but the majority are medieval.
  • Birdman discography ( nom), by Sufur222. The discography of American rapper Birdman consists of five studio albums (four as a solo artist, and one collaboration album with rapper Lil Wayne), one mixtape, nineteen music videos and forty singles, including twenty with him as a featured artist. In 2002, Birdman released his debut studio album Birdman under the recording name "Baby". It peaked at number 24 on the US Billboard 200, spending 23 weeks on the chart. In 2005, Birdman released his second album Fast Money, which peaked at number 9 on the Billboard 200. He has released two more successful albums and has an upcoming fifth album, Bigga Than Life.

Featured pictures

Six featured pictures were promoted this week:

  • US Postal Currency (5 cent; 1862-1863) ( nom; related article), created by the United States Post Office, scanned by Swtpc6800, and nominated by Crisco 1492. Essentially postage stamps printed on Treasury paper, postal currency arose during the American Civil War after people began hoarding coins and other currency. Issued from 21 August 1862 through 27 May 1863, the currency came in 5¢, 10¢, 25¢, and 50¢ denominations.
  • Polet Airlines An-124 RA-82075 ( nom; related article), created by Sergey Kustov and nominated by Russavia. The new featured picture depicts the Antonov An-124, also known as the Ruslan or Condor, a strategic airlift jet aircraft designed by the Ukrainian SSR's Antonov design bureau. First flown in 1982, the An-124 is the world's largest ever serially-manufactured cargo airplane and world's second largest operating cargo aircraft.
  • White-necked Petrel (Pterodroma cervicalis) ( nom; related article) by JJ Harrison. The White-necked Petrel is a seabird that averages 43 centimetres (17 in) in length, with a 30–32 centimetre (12–13 in) wingspan, and is found in much of the Pacific Ocean. However, the bird only breeds in two locations. According to the nominator, this photograph represents the only sighting of the bird in Tasmanian waters.
  • Salvin's Albatross ( nom; related article) by JJ Harrison. This new featured picture depicts Salvin's Albatross, which was once considered a subspecies of the Shy Albatross. The bird, which averages 90 cm (35 in) in length and 2.56 m (8.4 ft) across the wings, nests in various islands in the Southern Ocean. This photograph was taken east of the Tasman Peninsula, Tasmania.
  • Leaden Flycatcher ( nom; related article), created and nominated by JJ Harrison, with modifications by Jjron. After a debate on the exposure and saturation of the image, culminating with nine days in holding for clarification of the results, this edit of the original was promoted. This specimen of Leaden Flycatcher, a 15-centimetre (5.9 in) long passerine bird native to eastern and northern Australia, Indonesia, and Papua New Guinea, was shot in the Australian National Botanic Gardens in Canberra.
  • Mezcala Bridge ( nom; related article), created by Jujutacular and nominated by Pine. Promoted in a narrow 5–2 vote after a nomination in 2010 which failed by half a vote, this new featured image (below) depicts the Mezcala Bridge in Guerrero, Mexico. The cable-stayed bridge, built in the early 1990s, measures 891 m (2,923 ft) in total length over six spans and is used as a toll bridge.

Featured topics

One featured topic was promoted this week:

  • Faryl Smith ( nom) by J Milburn. Faryl Smith, a British teen mezzo-soprano who rose to fame after appearing on Britain's Got Talent in 2008, has released two albums. The 16 year old's debut album, Faryl, was the fastest-selling solo classical album in British chart history; her second album, Wonderland, was less commercially successful. The new featured topic consists of three articles, one on Smith and one for each of her albums.
This new featured picture depicts the Mezcala Bridge on Highway 95 in Guerrero, in Mexico. It spans the Balsas River (known locally as the Mezcala River) close to the western Pacific coast of the country. It was built as part of the 1989–1994 highway restructuring program in Mexico and at the time was considered to be the highest bridge in Mexico and the second highest multiple cable-stayed bridge in the world.


Reader comments

2012-03-12

Proposed decision in 'Article titles', only one open case

The Arbitration Committee neither opened nor closed any cases this week, leaving one open.

Open cases

Article titles and capitalization (Week 7)

This case was opened to review alleged disruptive editing on the Manual of Style (MoS) and other pages pertaining to article naming. The workshop phase had been extended by arbitrator AGK two weeks ago. Drafter David Fuchs posted a series of draft principles on 6 March, with the intention of spurring more focused discussion by parties. The proposed decision posted subsequently includes a statement concerning the status of the MoS as well as a request for more structured discussion and consensus-building on the disputed pages in question.

Other requests and committee action

2012-03-12

Diverse approaches to Wikipedia in Education

Good morning students, please open your textbooks to Chapter 1 and follow along as best you can. "Our great forebear the Public Policy Initiative came to light in the 2010–2011 academic year as a tiny sapling, knowing little of the forest that would sprout after it. The Wikipedia Education Program, supported by the Wikipedia Ambassador Program, is becoming increasingly global and increasingly volunteer-run. The Education desk should be your first point of contact for participation as the Signpost becomes the program's primary chronicler. Class is in session – it has been for 2 years now.


The View from Mexico: beyond article writing

Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education, Mexico City (ITESM)

Most Wikipedia/Wikimedia projects tied to education have been linked to the writing of articles, especially as an alternative to writing research papers, which are traditional in universities in the United States, Canada and some other countries. However, doing research and writing original (i.e. not plagiarized) texts is unknown in more than a few educational systems in the world. In these cases, it is probably not the best idea to have prospective Wikipedians start with writing articles from scratch.

Fortunately, participating in the "wiki-world" is not limited to writing new articles or expanding them, where skills such as research, assessing sources, synthesis and paraphrasing must all be used to avoid plagiarism. There are other ways to get students involved. The first is the translation of articles and other documents "in-wiki", which is acceptable as long as the text in the original language is credited. This is a good first introduction for many students, especially those for whom bilingualism is a very necessary component for their future careers. At my school, ITESM-Ciudad de México, all students are required to obtain a certain score on a standardized test (TOEFL) in English to graduate. No exceptions. For students capable in foreign languages, translation provides a near-immediate way to begin contributing significant content in their own language, and a way to teach how Wikipedia articles should be structured for those who do go on to write new articles. It also gives language teachers a handy way to teach rhetoric – especially comparative rhetoric – as students make decisions as to how to appropriately express ideas from one language in another.

Wikimedia projects do not need to be confined to classroom activities. For the Spring 2012 semester, the International Baccalaureate (IB) program at ITESM-CCM in Mexico City began a pilot program to have selected students work with Wikipedia as part of the "CAS" requirement. IB requires all of its students to fulfill a number of hours of activities outside of the classroom related to community service, creativity, and physical activity. The many opportunities that Wikipedia and its sister projects offer can be applied to all three of these criteria, which are broadly defined. The seven students who were selected for the pilot are Laloreed22, Jeanny Mos, LeValedush, CarlaFlores25, K.fontecha, Rob dvr and Carlosharo17. For training and initial introduction into the wider Wikipedia community, we decided to take advantage of the Teylers Museum Multilingual Challenge, running concurrently with the semester, working on translating articles related to the challenge into Spanish. While we are working in translation as an introduction, the students are not limited to this activity to fulfill their CAS requirement. Other activities such as photography, working with galleries, libraries, archives and museums (GLAM), and just about anything else that any Wikipedian can do, these students can do as well—it all depends on their interests and abilities.

With a bit of creativity, we can work with teachers to provide a wide variety of options: GLAM activities for those in fields such as library science and archeology; law and political science students can delve into questions about copyright, open culture and how these apply in their countries; and we should not forget those in the information technology and communications fields. For many of these students, these activities open doors and help them stand apart from their peers, perhaps the greatest gift working with Wikimedia can give.

Princeton's Mudd Library edit-a-thon

Mudd Library Edit-a-thon participants; see Commons for further media from the event

Another alternative educational approach has been a focus on work with university libraries (the "L" in GLAM) outside of the context of a specific class.

On Saturday, 18 February 2012, a group of sixteen enthusiastic volunteers—including Princeton University undergraduates, Wikipedians from the Wikimedia New York City chapter, Princeton community members, and Mudd Library staff— gathered for an edit-a-thon at Princeton University’s Seeley G. Mudd Manuscript Library. The event was organized by Princeton senior and technical services student worker Q Miceli, with the goal of introducing students and community members to the Wikipedia editing process through writing and updating Wikipedia articles about the university. Miceli subsequently wrote an entry on the Mudd Manuscript Library blog as well as an edit-a-thon how-to, which serves as a guide to those interested in emulating the event.

By the numbers, there were 16 attendees, six user accounts registered, four articles created, and nine articles expanded. Mudd Library is considering hosting another edit-a-thon around Princeton’s Reunions in late May. Feedback from University Library staff has been favorable, and participants and Princeton alumni who could not attend were eager to be notified if another edit-a-thon was scheduled.

Notes in chalk

  • Tools for tracking: A new Wikipedia Education Program MediaWiki extension is in development with the express purpose of improving management of the program, particularly the monitoring of participating students and their contributions.
  • Welcome to the academical village: This week saw the creation of WikiProject Academical Village, an effort in draft form intended to help standardise the educational outreach initiative by coordinating participants' activities "in the traditional and idiosyncratic WikiProject style."
  • Education Program hires a liaison: Rob Schnautz, who will be better known to readers as Bob the Wikipedian, has been hired to fill the position of Global Education Program Online Communications Contractor (likely the longest Foundation title yet created). In his new position, Schnautz will be responsible for "support and direct online communications around Wikimedia's Global Education Program ... [helping to] ensure effective communication with the Wikipedia community regarding the Program working closely with Online Ambassadors as well as the WMF staff involved". For further insight into what this might mean for the project, see the Signpost's in-depth interview with the Foundation's latest recruit.

    Reader comments

2012-03-12

Git learning curve steep but not insurmountable, plus a diff style we can all agree on?

Developers bracing themselves for steep learning curve after Git move

There are alternative solutions, but none of them are viable without development work. Gerrit is viable right now, in its current state. Its downside is that its interface is slightly painful.

Every tool we use is going to have something we dislike about it interface-wise.

—Operations Engineer Ryan Lane describing new code review tool Gerrit

Discussion of the move to Git took on a more serious tone this week, focusing on ways in which the (particularly volunteer) developer community might be unprepared for the sheer scale of the change that lies ahead ( wikitech-l mailing list). The long and detailed thread provided developers with a useful opportunity to ask detailed questions about the system coming into operation later in the month.

The difficulty, it seems, is that there is no easy option for developers: even casual contributors will have to get used to a completely different development workflow (incorporating a new process for committing and a new process for reviewing and commenting on other developers' code), not to mention a whole new vocabulary. Unpicking that steep learning curve and presenting it in "bitesize chunks" has proved tricky for the WMF team overseeing the move, given the amount of interdependence between a developer's command-line Git instance and the Wikimedia-side Gerrit review system with its much-critiqued user interface. On the plus side, numerous websites exist to help users unfamiliar with Git pick up not just the basics but also the more tricky syntax that developers will need to master if they are to contribute fully to MediaWiki after the March 28 transition.

Ultimately, few seem worried that developers will not be able to master the new system in good time, although, in the words of Diederik van Liere (currently a consultant at the WMF), "a new workflow requires new habits and that might take more time to develop". Among those effects with the potential to linger, the front-runner seems to be the (not yet fully understood) implications of the move on the historically pertinent volunteer-staff divide. Only time, it seems, will tell.

February Engineering Report published

WMF developers are currently working on a way to turn SMS messages (and their visually similar USSD counterparts) – the preserve of "chatty" conversations in the developed world – into an important link between the developing world and the sum of human knowledge.

The Wikimedia Foundation's engineering report for February 2012 was published this week on the Wikimedia Techblog and on the MediaWiki wiki, giving an overview of all Foundation-sponsored technical operations in that month. Ultimately, it was a month dominated by a handful of big projects, each of which have already been covered in the Signpost: the problematic Swift deployment, preparations for the move to Git, the 1.19 deployments (see release notes) and, to a lesser extent, progress with the Wikimedia Android app, which is now providing the foundation for a new Wikimedia iPhone app. As ever, however, the report provided details of many smaller projects that had received less of a spotlight.

One such project is the creation of a Wiktionary app by a team of Canadian students under the guidance of WMF staff developers. According to the report, the team is currently focusing on "targeting bugs, cleaning things up and improving usability in the v0.1 Alpha release". In similar news, there was also an update on efforts to make the MobileFrontend extension (which powers m.en.wikipedia.org and family) less WMF-centric, following a sharp critique of its shortcomings in January, as well as news that good progress is being made on a project to provide Wikipedia content via SMS/ USSD, a major boost for mobile-only visitors on 2G connections (such as those found in parts of the developing world).

Elsewhere, the report noted the steps being taken to improve the number and depth of full site backups; two WMF locations now host copies of all Wikimedia dumps and two external mirrors are currently in the final stages of preparation. Finally, there was confirmation that a short period of slowness experienced on February 27 was in fact the result of a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack of unknown origin and motivation. The attack, which lasted only ten minutes, was brought to an end by the quick work of system administrators.

In brief

Not all fixes may have gone live to WMF sites at the time of writing; some may not be scheduled to go live for many weeks.

  • WMF confirms GoDaddy departure: WMF legal counsel Michelle Paulson blogged on behalf of the Foundation this week to confirm the transfer of Wikimedia's many domain names from previous registrar GoDaddy to competitor MarkMonitor. Although the move is of little technical importance, Paulson said she was hopeful "the company will help the Foundation consolidate and centralize management of all of its domains, will provide services needed to manage a global domain portfolio and will better protect our domains with additional security features", with the latter-most thought to refer to mostly trademark infringement and phishing attempts.
  • Wikimedians, meet Wikidata: Wikimedia Deutschland's new community communications manager for its Wikidata project, KDE board member Lydia Pintscher, has announced an introductory communications road map for the project, with which regular readers of the "Technology report" will be relatively familiar. The project's current focus is on collecting input, creating resources "to explain the project better", setting up infrastructure, and working on a structured input collection system; the heavy development work is expected to begin next month. (Those excited by the potential of the project will be interested to know that the Signpost will be running a special report in April in order to address the topic in more detail.)
  • ProofreadPage in need of TLC: Localisation team member and prolific blogger Gerard Meijssen used a post on his personal blog to highlight the plight of ProofreadPage, an OCR-based extension that provides the backbone of the Wikisource projects. Like many extensions, it has suffered from the semi-retirement of one of its key maintainers, prompting others to make ad hoc edits to keep it functioning. The good news, Meijssen reported, was that (unlike many other such extensions) a new lead maintainer for ProofreadPage had now emerged from the developer community.
  • Better mathematics rendering coming soon to a wiki near you: WMF lead software architect Brion Vibber wrote this week about his efforts to implement MathJax, a JavaScript-based system for rendering mathematical notation ( JavaScript-only example) that boasts a considerable number of advantages over the existing server-side system, including better zooming of text and better inline display. In his post, Vibber said that he was hopeful that the feature-rich, actively maintained framework would make it into the user preferences selection list "soon", before becoming the default at a later point in time.
  • Approvals at Bots/Requests for Approvals. Six BRfAs were recently approved:
    1. BG19bot's 2nd BRfA, for the automatic removal of {{ WikiProject Sports}} from biography talk pages
    2. BattyBot's 8th BRfA, to change {{ Unreferenced}} to {{ BLP unsourced}} on articles in Category:Living people
    3. EnzaiBot, operation of another interwiki.py interwiki bot
    4. Thehelpfulbot's 11th BrFA, to send newsletters or other talk page messages to the User talk: and Talk: when requested to by users or WikiProjects
    5. TPBot, picking up several tasks previously performed by User:X!'s bots (running the exact same code; one of the reasons bot authors are encouraged to publish their source code). It will update the RfX Report, update the RfX Tally, update CratStats for each bureaucrat, and update Adminstats for each admin.
    6. ListManBot, which will maintain MediaWiki:Bad image list
15 BRfAs are open at the time of writing. Community input is encouraged.
  • Landing page project introduced: WMF community liaison for product development Oliver Keyes used a post on the Foundation-l mailing list this week to announce an early-stages project to improve the experience of new users bewildered by the page that resulted from clicking on a red link. While the neatness of the prototype landing page could not be denied, there was earlier skepticism about the scope of the problem, at least on established wikis where article creation tends to be a premeditated rather than impulse action.
  • Differing diff colours remain on agenda: The process to formulate new diff colours for MediaWiki continued this week; the latest version (pictured below) replaces the current system of paragraph-level background colouring (plus sentence-level text colouring) with a heavy border in either blue (for lines added) or yellow (lines removed) at the paragraph level, and soft background colouring at the sentence level. The move is intended to make diffs more accessible, particularly to those with red-green colour blindness.
The diff style provided for by the latest MediaWiki code, and hence set to go live within weeks


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