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Please nullify the reviewer's commitment to review due to lack of review actions (similar to abandoned review) on
Talk:Modafinil#GA_Review_3
I would like to ask appropriate administrators or appropriate persons involved in overall management of the GA process for a reconsideration of the review commitment by
User:Irruptive Creditor for the review page
Talk:Modafinil#GA_Review_3. The assigned reviewer has not undertaken any review actions, such as providing feedback or asking questions, leaving the review section empty and in a state of limbo, apart from my message where I tried to contact the reviewer. I tried to contact the reviewer on the review page, their user page, and via Wikipedia email, there has been no response; still, the reviewer was active on Wikipedia on April 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 12 according to their edit history, yet, as of now, they did not reply to any of the outreach attempts; therefore, I believe that the commitment to review may have been a misclick.
As such, I propose that the review commitment be nullified, and the review request for the
Modafinil article be returned to the queue. However, rather than treating it as a new request, I suggest it retains its original position and date, as if the review had never commenced. This is akin to an abandoned review, but without the disadvantage of returning to the queue anew. I tried to engage with the reviewer, and the lack of activity from the reviewer’s side should not penalize the progress of the article’s review process.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
16:04, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I am unsure what you mean by "akin to an abandoned review"
Maxim Masiutin; this is an abandoned review, and the procedure followed for them is precisely to return the nomination to its original position in the GAN queue. I will tag the page for G6 deletion.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
16:47, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I checked now the articles nominated for review and the date of
Modafinil is as I requested, i.e. 23 February 2024, the date it had initially. This is exactly what I asked for. Thank you! I didn't know whether it is handled automatically when you delete a review, or you had manually to adjust the date. Please let me know if it was handled automatically, so If next time it will be the same situation, I will just ask you "to request a G6 deletion of the review page" as specified in
WP:GAN/I#N4a -- sorry for my initial lenghy request, as I don't have full knowledge of the what's going behind the scene.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
22:00, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
By the phrase "akin to an abandoned review" I meant a situation where a review process has been initiated but not followed through by the assigned reviewer. This is similar to an "abandoned review" where the reviewer has stopped participating in the review process, but with a key difference: in a typical "abandoned review" scenario, as per the Wikipedia instructions, the review would return to the backlog and be treated as a new request. This could potentially delay the review process as it would need to wait for a new reviewer to pick it up from the start in a priority similar to new nominations. However, in my case, I asked the administrators to handle so that the Modafinil article be returned to the queue, retaining its original position and date, as if the review had never commenced. Particularly relevant instruction in my case is (quote): "If the reviewer has not made any comments other than opening the review, it may be better to request a G6 deletion of the review page and start over" - still, it is not explained to which position the nomination should return in the queue. In my case, I asked that the review would not be treated as a new request, but rather continue from where it left off, thus avoiding the delay associated with starting the review process anew. This is what I meant by "akin to an abandoned review, but without the disadvantage of returning to the queue anew".
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
21:55, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
My understanding is that this was an abandoned review. The process described at
WP:GAN/I#N4a was followed. If there had been more comments and if the G6 were declined, I believe the nom would still be in the same place in the queue.
Firefangledfeathers (
talk /
contribs)
23:16, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Going to hijack this to ask about a related issue.
Talk:Melania Trump/GA1 received just a few bullet points about the first few sections before the reviewer CSD'd it, but an admin rejected the CSD and set it to second opinion instead. Is this the correct process?
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
21:57, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't see why that would help
Maxim Masiutin; in any case, you're not handling anything.
Thebiguglyalien, as the review is seemingly complete in the reviewer's eyes, and you're the one dissatisfied, I would say that asking for a second opinion is the correct process; you can of course also ask the reviewer to fail the nomination and renominate the article.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
23:20, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I probably would have declined the G6 also, since there were substantive comments made in the review—not saying there weren't other issues. I'm not sure what the next step is, but a second opinion seems reasonable to me.
Firefangledfeathers (
talk /
contribs)
23:16, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Hello! Just a quick question, is there a specific guideline that constrains the number of GANs one can nominate? My expectation would be in terms of fairness that the closer to one, the better, so as not to saturate a backlog and give other users equal opportunity to have users select their articles for review. Is this thinking correct? If so, is this explained anywhere?
VRXCES (
talk)
05:30, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
There's no maximum, although if you have more than 10 at once, anything new that you nominate gets temporarily hidden in a separate little collapsed box. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)05:56, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
New statistics tool to get information about an editor's GA history
I've created
a GA statistics page that takes an editor's name as input and returns some summary information about their interactions with GA. It shows all their nominations and reviews, and gives a summary of their statistics -- number promoted, number that are still GAs, and the review-to-GA ratio. Please let me know about any bugs or enhancement suggestions.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
14:20, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for creating this tool, Mike. I noticed when I input
my name, I'm credited for two nominations that weren't done by me. This is because I reverted some out of process promotions
(see this diff) and it appears the tool thinks I was the nominator, because I was the one who made the edit restoring the nominee template, even though the real nominator's name was present within the template.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
14:24, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
One other comment: the tool makes it look like my nominations to promotions ratio is lower than it actually is, because it is actually counting GAs later promoted to FAs against me (4 such articles in my case). Is there a way this could be accounted for by the tool?
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
14:27, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
My concern is not with the review ratio, I agree that it should reflect all nominations I've made to be fair. It's more that it makes it look like I've had 5 GAs that were delisted, when only 1 was actually delisted and the other 4 are now FAs. I'm not sure what the answer is for this.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
22:01, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
It appears about 70 GAs were not properly categorized in the database; not sure why, but I'm doing a run now that should fix them. Please let me know if you see more omissions.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
16:42, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Should now be fixed -- the tool was case sensitive for that value, but I've made it case-insensitive. If we ever get two users at GA whose usernames differ only in case I'll have to change it back.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
15:54, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Looks like the issue was actually that my search was "Lee Vilenski " rather than "Lee Vilenski" (mobiles tend to add additional spaces for reasons). Searching just for the username gives the correct info. In case someone else mentions it. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)12:49, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Ratio of reviews to successful nominations: Infinite
Obviously, I have done GA nominations which were then promoted to have that number that are still GAs; and I have done a number of reviews. All of these were within the last 6 months, so they were surely captured by ChristieBot.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
17:28, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
It seems the problem is the tool sometimes gets into a state where it can't get to most of the data. I fixed the problem for now by restarting it so you should see your numbers now, but it will no doubt happen again. I'll see if I can figure out what's going on.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
17:49, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
I've got a similar issue with my stats:
GA nominations: 0
Promoted GA nominations: 0
Promoted GA nominations that are still GAs: 14
GA reviews: 0
Ratio of reviews to successful nominations: Infinite
I tried checking PMC and Premeditated_Chaos in case the issue was with the space, or my signature, but no dice. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)18:26, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
User:Tim O'Doherty, who also has two FA nominations to his name, asserts to have nominated 8 successful GAs and reviewed 12 GAs, some of which I have been involved with. However, according to the GA nominations page and the new GA statistics tool, it shows that Tim has neither nominated nor reviewed any successful GAs. I was hoping you, @
Mike Christie, could look into this since ChristieBot and the new GA statistics tool were developed by you. Regards, and yours faithfully.
MSincccc (
talk)
06:44, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
However, it appears the bot that maintains the "still a GA" number is not recording the data correctly for users with apostrophes, so that number is still showing as zero for Tim. I've left the maintainer of that bot a message.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
10:38, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: I've had four successful GA nominations under my belt, but the tool indicates five, possibly due to the Prince George of Wales nomination being listed twice instead of once. Tim O'Doherty successfully promoted the article to GA-status, whereas AndrewPeterT abandoned the review after making just the opening comments. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
10:16, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
The bot decided that AndrewPeterT's review was a pass because there's no record of the outcome anywhere, and the article is currently a GA. I've added article history to the talk page and rerun the analytics for that GA, and the bot now understands it was not a promotion. Aishwarya Rai Bachchan is missing because in debugging over the last couple of days I inadvertently caused a problem for the part of the process that picks up new GAs, which is supposed to run once a day. It'll run again today; if you don't see the GA reflected in the tool's output tomorrow morning let me know and I'll take another look.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
10:58, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: On the project page
Wikipedia talk:Good article nominations, under the Royalty, nobility, and heraldry section where it indicates that the article
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh is under review, it still displays-Review: this article is being reviewed (additional comments are welcome). (13 reviews, 0 GAs) Tim O'Doherty (talk) 13:28, 23 March 2024 (UTC) However, we are aware that Tim has 8 successful GA promotions attributed to him both from the new tool and his own record. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
11:09, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
That number comes from
this tool, which doesn't correctly handle usernames that contain apostrophes. Per
this discussion I am planning to change that number from "promoted GAs that are still GAs" to "promoted GAs regardless of whether they are still GAs"; I can provide the latter number accurately, so the number should be correct then. It'll be at least a week or two till I can make that change, though, as I'm travelling this weekend and don't want to make changes when I'm unable to fix any problems they cause.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:41, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: Adding my thanks for the creation of this tool. Looking at
my stats, I see two oddities:
It lists me as the nominator for
Talk:California/GA2, and not the
actual nominator. This one is confusing because I'd never edited any page associated with that GA review.
Both should now be fixed. I don't know why the California one was assigned to you; I reran that analytics step for that page and it corrected it. For Freetown station, part of the problem was that there was no easy way for the bot to figure out what the outcome was of the first review; there was no "Failed GA" template, for example. I added article history to the talk page and reran the analytics and that seems to have sorted it out.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
21:24, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
I'll be working on the tool this afternoon trying to figure it why it keeps producing zeros after a few queries. In the meantime here are the numbers for Generalissima:
Is it possible to get a list of all GA reviews you're credited with? My personal count only has 104, I'm curious what ones I've missed ♠
PMC♠
(talk)19:17, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Hi Mike, would you consider a slight tweak of the sort order? The "reviews" are sorted by nomination date, so my first review is listed at number 5 (the first five are 5-2-1-4-3). It would make more sense to sort the reviews by review date (ideally by start of the review, actually). —
Kusma (
talk)
13:13, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
Very interesting, thanks for creating this. A slight bug in my results, may have been reported above. The tool reports 19 nominations, 19 promoted nominations, and 14 that are still GAs. None of my GAs have been delisted. Three have been promoted to FA. I think the discrepancy for the other 2 is that there were abortive initial reviews, and both were promoted after GA2. That's my guess, and it's not a big deal.
Mackensen(talk)22:55, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
(Also @
Trainsandotherthings, since you raised the same question): the "still GAs" isn't meant to imply that the others were delisted; just that they're not currently listed as GAs -- in many cases this will be because they were promoted to FA, not demoted. I'll find a way to phrase this on the tool's output page to make this clearer. Mackensen, I'll have a look at the other two you mention and see if I can figure out what happened.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
01:34, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Could the tool tell me which promoted GA nominations are no longer GAs (as a column in the table)? Could it even track which promoted GA nominations are neither GAs nor FAs? (Using myself as a test case the tool indicates there should be 4, of which I expect one to be the delisted
The Game (mind game) and three to be the featured
San Junipero,
The 1975 (song) and
Why Marx Was Right.) Also, I'm impressed that it seems to track page moves appropriately (
Nosedive moved to
Nosedive (Black Mirror)). —
Bilorv (talk)
18:47, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
It's not easy to tell whether a page is FA, GA, A, B, etc; there's no single place I can look. However, SDZeroBot does keep track of which articles are currently GA, so I could try checking that and see if I can match up the article names. I might be able to search for the article names in WP:FA or the various GA pages as well. I probably won't work on this for a couple of weeks as I'll be traveling next weekend but will put it on the list.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
22:24, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Promotion percentage
I thought it would be interesting to see the promotion percentage for our most prolific reviewers -- that is how many of their reviews end by promoting the article to GA. Here's the list for everyone with at least 100 reviews. This doesn't account for name changes (e.g. Malleus Fatuorum -> Eric Corbett) but I can probably fix that if I turn this into a query on the tool's webpage. I don't think there's necessarily anything negative about a very high promotion percentage -- a reviewer who picks up articles from nominators they know are very reliable might well have a promotion percentage close to 100%, for example, whereas a reviewer who makes a point of reviewing articles by inexperienced nominators (as I've done intermittently) might have an unusually low promotion percentage. Still, I think the numbers are interesting.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
16:26, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
In case anyone else is wondering why my percentage is so low: I don't think it's because I have unreasonably high standards, but more because I tend to pick articles to review where I can reasonably predict the outcome: either a quick fail or a relatively easy pass. I don't want to get drawn into games of whack-a-mole where I point out examples of problematic material in a nominated article, the nominator fixes those examples but not the general problem, and I have to keep finding more examples ad nauseam. For a while that was leading me to deliberately seek out nominations that could be (justifiably!) quick failed, hence my high fail rate. I think for the ones where I initiated a full review rather than a quick fail, my pass rate is much higher. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
19:04, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Very interesting indeed. By my quick calculations, the mean promotion rate for our most active reviewers listed in your table is 86.3% (excluding David Eppstein pushes it up very slightly to 86.6%), and the median promotion rate for the reviewers listed is 91% – so you are marginally more likely to have your nominations promoted if it is picked up by a very active reviewer. This data doesn't let us say why that might be, but a couple of thoughts:
Historically reviewers had relatively lower standards than today and were more prolific because reviews used to take less time, and so are disproportionately represented in the "very active reviewer" dataset (there are a lot of names which I do not recognise, or which I do recognise as no longer editing, in that dataset, so this is entirely possible)
Very active reviewers have a better idea of which articles are going to pass (either because they recognise the nominator or they have a better preliminary assessment of how good an article is) and favour reviewing better articles
Very active reviewers are careless and more willing to promote articles which are not at GA standards (anecdotally I suspect this is not true given the names I recognise on the list)
Less active reviewers overcompensate and require things above and beyond the GA standard, and therefore fail things which an experienced reviewer might pass (I have certainly seen this behaviour, but I've also seen inexperienced reviewers pass things which I would not have, so I'm not sure which direction this actually tilts the stats in)
Passing reviews take less time on average than failing them, so the most active reviewers are the ones who review the most articles which go on to pass
The most active reviewers are the most willing to handhold a borderline article through to passing (perhaps because they generally spend more time onwiki, so they can devote more time to any given review)
Agreed that this is interesting! As you say, I suspect the main differentiating factor is the reviewer's personal choices about what kinds of articles to review. —
Ganesha811 (
talk)
18:26, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
Promotion percentage for GA reviewers with 100 reviews
Reviewer
Promoted
Not_promoted
% promoted
West Virginian
150
0
100%
Anotherclown
158
1
99%
Ian Rose
137
1
99%
Simongraham
116
1
99%
Rcej
245
3
99%
Grapple X
122
2
98%
ThinkBlue
356
7
98%
Iazyges
254
6
98%
BennyOnTheLoose
122
3
98%
Seabuckthorn
161
4
98%
Gog the Mild
156
4
98%
Damien Linnane
129
4
97%
Dr. Blofeld
231
8
97%
Shearonink
111
4
97%
CatRacer22
447
18
96%
Zawed
219
9
96%
LunaEatsTuna
117
5
96%
The Rambling Man
730
33
96%
Parsecboy
169
8
95%
Wilhelmina Will
123
6
95%
Dom497
123
6
95%
Hawkeye7
185
10
95%
Courcelles
239
13
95%
Gen. Quon
140
8
95%
AustralianRupert
155
9
95%
Ealdgyth
288
17
94%
A person in Georgia
326
20
94%
QatarStarsLeague
141
9
94%
Hog Farm
376
24
94%
Xtzou
121
8
94%
KCVelaga
120
8
94%
Usernameunique
132
9
94%
Peacemaker67
354
25
93%
Sturmvogel 66
872
62
93%
Nova Crystallis
161
12
93%
Eddie891
120
9
93%
Status
119
9
93%
Ruby2010
132
10
93%
Dough4872
330
25
93%
ProtoDrake
130
10
93%
Rp0211
104
8
93%
Auntieruth55
115
9
93%
Whiteguru
102
8
93%
Razr Nation
114
9
93%
Ecpiandy
160
13
92%
12george1
185
16
92%
Jaguar
682
63
92%
Yellow Evan
171
16
91%
Ed!
217
21
91%
Kyle Peake
506
49
91%
Tomcat7
171
17
91%
Vami IV
99
10
91%
Casliber
324
33
91%
Zanimum
107
11
91%
Jackyd101
125
13
91%
Cerebellum
91
10
90%
Aoba47
270
31
90%
Sainsf
281
33
89%
Mattisse
210
25
89%
Pyrotec
436
52
89%
Juliancolton
107
13
89%
MathewTownsend
179
23
89%
Tim riley
172
23
88%
AryKun
107
15
88%
Sammi Brie
261
37
88%
FunkMonk
261
38
87%
Miyagawa
225
33
87%
Carbrera
181
27
87%
Lemonade51
97
15
87%
GhostRiver
191
30
86%
Malleus Fatuorum
169
30
85%
Chiswick Chap
298
58
84%
Lee Vilenski
251
49
84%
Jens Lallensack
148
30
83%
Zwerg Nase
86
18
83%
Cartoon network freak
154
33
82%
Sarastro1
88
19
82%
J Milburn
386
85
82%
Wizardman
581
129
82%
Cwmhiraeth
133
30
82%
Hurricanehink
194
45
81%
MarioSoulTruthFan
165
41
80%
Arsenikk
245
63
80%
ChrisGualtieri
102
27
79%
Kosack
98
26
79%
Amitchell125
188
50
79%
Dana boomer
348
93
79%
Jim Sweeney
86
23
79%
Mike Christie
355
97
79%
Harrias
150
43
78%
Sasata
145
45
76%
Kingsif
102
34
75%
Calvin999
190
65
75%
Cirt
209
82
72%
Ritchie333
127
51
71%
Ganesha811
103
42
71%
Hchc2009
73
32
70%
Khazar2
253
117
68%
Premeditated Chaos
72
34
68%
Jezhotwells
386
187
67%
SilkTork
114
71
62%
David Fuchs
66
44
60%
MPJ-DK
59
44
57%
Aircorn
60
47
56%
SNUGGUMS
124
101
55%
Gary
101
112
47%
TonyTheTiger
101
113
47%
David Eppstein
35
89
28%
New mentorship page
The old good article mentorship page can be found at
Wikipedia:Good article help/mentor, where it consists solely of an outdated list of usernames. There's clearly interest in mentoring, as it managed to gather 27 mentors over its run, but a simple list of usernames isn't that helpful. I created a basic outline at
Wikipedia:Good article mentorship for a new mentorship process. The key difference here is that instead of having to choose from an intimidating list of names, aspiring reviewers can request a mentor in a similar format as
GOCE requests.
Subpages:
Wikipedia:Good article mentorship/Top – The transcluded text and formatting of the page. Transclusion allows for the separation of page content and discussion, including automatic signing.
Wikipedia:Good article mentorship/Preload – The default preload text when creating a request. This will create a new subsection, inviting the mentee to specify what aspects they need the most help with, and to state what subject area they'd like help starting a review in if they haven't chosen a nom.
It's just an outline right now, so please edit the text and layout. Formatting is not my forte. If even just a few people become regular reviewers through this, it would be a significant improvement to the backlog and the good article process.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
21:14, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Yeah, that seems pretty good to me. I'd be happy if newish reviewers (and nominators) had a guiding hand rather than some of the crazy threads we see after the fact here sometimes. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)21:27, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Sounds great. Maybe we should start a new page rather than using the old mentors page, since that way we know all the mentors are familiar with this system and actively watching it. --
asilvering (
talk)
17:15, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
I agree, and I've created a new one with a similar format. Maybe once this is up and running a message can be sent to anyone on the old list who's still active to see if they're interested.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
22:24, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
All of the individual pieces should be put together now. But before this gets "launched", I assume the community here would want to discuss how much involvement a mentor would have, and if there are any specific aspects that should/shouldn't be included in their role. And whether the "norm" would be for the mentor to be more active on the review page or on the reviewer's talk page.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
23:14, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Thebiguglyalien, can you find a guinea pig who wants mentorship and do a first go at it and a debrief? Maybe it's just me but I think the direct approach will get us to a working model more quickly than talking about it here in the abstract. --
asilvering (
talk)
23:43, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I was thinking the same thing, I just wanted to make sure all of the obvious stuff was established. I was thinking about asking for a guinea pig on the
WP:DISCORD given its heavy population of editors who are moderately experienced but not heavily involved in these processes.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
23:45, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Yes, much better to ask mentees to request on a dedicated page and have active mentors pick requests up. Could we have some emphasis on "during your first review, consider requesting on this page for someone to provide feedback"? It would be hard to give useful feedback if someone just wrote "I'm thinking of starting GA reviewing—please advise". A mentor needs to have something the mentee has produced (though I suppose that could be contributions history) to scrutinise. —
Bilorv (talk)
21:31, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
Major usability issue in the user interface of the Good Article nominations list - proposal to fix
Let me raise the major usability issue in the user interface of the Good Article nominations list that I observed first time I submitted an article for GA review a few years ago.
The number of reviews and GAs in parentheses before the user name is misleading as if it was a number of reviews ans GAs that the article received, not the user.
Consider the following example:
Boot Monument (talk | history | discuss review) – American Revolutionary War memorial – (6 reviews, 0 GAs) Relativity (talk) 02:29, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
Review: this article is being reviewed (additional comments are welcome). (32 reviews, 19 GAs) Harper J. Cole (talk) 11:12, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
It looks like the article "Boot Monument" so far has 6 reviews and 0 GAs or 32 reviews, 19 GAs, suggesting a collective review process for a first-time users who don't understand the process.
Initially, it was only me who understood this way, but later I saw other editors understood the same way as me, suggesting that it was not my fault but a major usability issue in the user interface of the Good Article nominations list.
I could not find particular examples in the archive to prove my point that other users understood as me, but such cases existed. Maybe I will manage to find examples. However, please do not consider my examples as crucial for considering my request, evaluate my request without the examples.
My proposal is to present the list differently:
Boot Monument (talk | history | discuss review) – American Revolutionary War memorial – (nominated by Relativity who has a past history of 6 reviews and 0 GAs) Relativity (talk) 02:29, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
Review: this article is being reviewed (additional comments are welcome). (being reviewed by Harper J. Cole who has a past history of 32 reviews and 19 GAs) Harper J. Cole (talk) 11:12, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
The exact phrase "who has a past history of" can be slightly different, for example consider other variants, such as:
(nominated by Relativity with a track record of 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity who has accumulated 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity boasting 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity known for 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity with a background of 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity having 6 reviews and 0 GAs to their name)
(nominated by Relativity with a history of 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity who has previously achieved 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity credited with 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity who has been recognized for 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
We can use any of these alternatives to convey the experience and contributions of the nominator and the reviewer in a clear and concise manner.
My proposal makes lines longer by having the names used twice per line: first time in parenthesis and the second time as a signature similar to that generated by four tildas ~~~~, still, it will resolve the usability issue.
If you are concerned about the lengths of the lines, remove the signature, the user name will be used only once. Signatures provide automated way to reply, but there is no need to reply in the GA nominations list.
Additional benefit of my proposal is that will not only make the list easier to understand, but it will bring clarity for new users on the steps of the GA review process. The current format can be confusing for new users who are not familiar with the Good Article nomination process. By explicitly stating the track record of the nominator and reviewer, we eliminate any ambiguity regarding the source of the reviews and GAs.
I believe that my proposal is consistent with Wikipedia standards. Wikipedia values clarity and transparency in its content and processes. The proposed change aligns with these values by making the information more accessible and understandable.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
22:38, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I will appreciate if the editors or administrator who take care of the overall GA review process nominate my proposal to the whole list of proposals as "Proposal N:..." by putting to to the list of the all proposals.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
22:45, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
The proposal drive has ended. And for what it's worth, I never once read the nominations this way, and I don't know if anyone else has either. The proposed change would require a huge use of space on a page that's already full to bursting.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
23:06, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
If your concern is space than my proposal also saves space wasted by tildas, so your concern is addressed by the poposal. Here it how it looks without tildas:
Boot Monument (talk | history | discuss review) – American Revolutionary War memorial – nominated by Relativity who has 6 reviews and 0 GAs.
Review: this article is being reviewed by Harper J. Cole who has 6 reviews and 0 GAs (additional comments are welcome)
Please take your concerns about accessibility and apply them to your own comments, which are probably second to none in sheer tediousness on this site. You have been told such before, on this very page—if you can't remember, you will find it in the archives; no need for miffling about with "maybes".
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
23:34, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I could not find in archives due to poor usability of the search feature. Wikipedia should not be for nerds. My recent example was related to the reviews
Talk:Ketotifen/GA1,
Talk:Modafinil/GA1, and other reviews by
User:BeingObjective. He submitted to many reviews and provided pass or fail message but didn't formally conclude the reviews, when we asked him to conclude reviews, he wrote that he he thought that it is a collective process and his opinion was only a vote. This was in 2023. When I submitted my first article I also thought the same way as
User:BeingObjective.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
00:56, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
If there must be a change this is the way to do it, but I am not convinced there is a need to make a change. Say in either case it is read wrongly, does this matter much? Not really.
CMD (
talk)
01:43, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
It matters much because misleads the newcomer into belief that the counters are related to the article being reviewed, that the review is collective process of votes so that if they click to add their vote to the already big number of reviews of the article it would not hurt.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
06:27, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
First of all, I don't think the current structure implies any kind of collective voting process. But let's agree that you thought it was - how many people aside from you have actually made that error? ♠
PMC♠
(talk)06:49, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't know how many people aside from me have actually made that error. The current structure has counters related to user near the article not near the user, there is no reason in positioning it that way. It should be posisioned correctly and unambigously.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
07:06, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
BeingObjective made this error, he wrote about it, but this list of users is not exhaustive, as we may not be aware of all cases, users may not complain or we may not ask them the reason. Typical signals to watch if when a reviwer submit to a few reviews and do not complete at least one.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
07:07, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
This usability error affects not only the newcomers but old editors as well who suffer from their nominations clicked by newcomers misled by this practice of putting counters of user near the article.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
07:13, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
As far as I can see BeingObjective never said anywhere that they were confused by the "(X reviews, Y GAs)" thing, so I don't know why we are citing them as evidence for changing the system. If we were implementing this from scratch I think I would support Skyshifter's proposed ordering, but I really don't think it's so significant that it's worth changing everything around now we have an established order. People are used to the current system, and the chance that changing it confuses people (and potentially breaks any bots or scripts which expect the layout in a particular order) seems to me to be a good reason not to change things unless there's a compelling reason to, which I'm really not seeing at the moment.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
14:09, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
If nothing else works, read the documentation principle means that you don't have to intentionally make obscure design to force the user read the documentation. You didn't comment on whether the current location of counters or that proposed by me and
User:Skyshifter is the correct one. If you prefer instead to discuss rule following without starting a new discussion thread, let us do so.
Before you ask others to follow the rules, start with yourself and show by example. I once joined as a second opinion reviewer and concluded the review as Fail while it was a procedural/technical error, I was not authorized to conclude the review as a second opinion reviewer, it was the exclusive competence of the first reviewer. Instead, you admitted my completion of the review and admitted discussion on merit on whether my Fail vote was appropriate or should I have changed my mind to Pass. This discussion was supported by other editors, yet nobody, following the rules, cancelled my completion vote and provided the way for the first reviewer to complete the review as prescribed by the rules.
As for the blocked user BeingObjective issue that you raised, let us also discuss it if you think it is important. He followed the rules on target audience in medical articles and helped rewrite articles in proper language removing jargon, but didn't follow GA rules. He made valuable contributions to the quality of articles yet got banned.
Folllowing rules on article quality and improving the article quality such as BeingObjective did has more merit as it brings more value to readers than following rules on GA process which brings more value to editors rather then users. We write encyclopedia for readers, we are not a social network. Blocking editors such as BeingObjective led that he was the only one editor ever who answered my calls for expert opinion, other calls just hang for months. More users you block, worse for the reader will be. Editors such as BeingObjective should not cope throught and design minefileds of interface design ambiguities and rules scattered through various texts - the thing he didn't manage to do. We now cannot ask him how he interpreted the GA counters because we blocked him.
George Johnson | "Hanged by mistake 1882. He was right we was wrong but we hung him and he's gone.
Are you seriously comparing this to a hanging? You ought to be blocked for the amount of bloviating you've done to date all based on your inability to follow simple instructions. If you really think that GAN "is collective process of votes" then we are clearly dealing with a PEBCAK error.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
21:25, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
Yes, once you block a Wikipedia user, this user is gone forever, we cannot ask BeingObjective about GA review because we blocked him.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
21:34, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
As for the user BeingObjective, I don't think that it was a PEBCAK error in that case. That user could rewrite articles for simplicity to be understood by general audience as required by Wikipedia, and he could provide expert help on Medicine when I used "expert opinion requested" template. You cannot do that, but you can understand GA counters. Each person has different abilities and we have to acknowledge that.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
21:38, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
And if you do not cease your constant tediousness, I will be opening a thread at ANI to achieve the same result for you. You may take that as a final warning.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
21:36, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
I've expressed my concerns that this is an unreasonable number of reviews to be doing at once and that they may not be fluent enough in the language to pursue reviewing at this time, but they disagreed. As I said to them, I appreciate their drive and I think they could do a lot of good for Wikipedia, but this isn't the best way to go about it. Previous discussions at their talk page (
permalink) and mine (
permalink).
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
08:06, 9 April 2024 (UTC)
I've noticed them, but as they haven't actually abandoned a review yet, I haven't engaged. I would suggest that they try to pick up reviews one at a time though.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
10:23, 9 April 2024 (UTC)
Thebiguglyalien, I agree. I would recommend all of their open reviews be reset. All they seem to have great intentions, I think there is a lot of learning to do before they are able to go through this type of reviewing process successfully. « Gonzo fan2007(talk) @ 14:44, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
I see this page now says, "Warning: nomination is malformed -- Status indicates review has started but there is no review page" re:
Lashauwn Beyond. I am hoping someone can fix this, so the review can get picked up. Was a bit disappointed with the result of the
Dwayne Cooper GAN (
Talk:Dwayne Cooper/GA1), but oh well! Thanks for any help with the reset here. ---
Another Believer(
Talk)16:40, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
SafariScribe appears to have realised they have bitten off more than they could chew with
Jude Law,
Pure Japanese and
Lashauwn Beyond, and requested to delete those reviews without correctly fixing the talk pages, which I have now done. I don't quite know what they were insinuating with "glorious contributions" at
Talk:Dwayne Cooper/GA1, but that was definitely a sub-par review; there is in any case no prejudice against immediately renominating.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
16:51, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
Another Believer, @
Thebiguglyalien, @
Gonzo fan2007, @
AirshipJungleman29, @
Asilvering, thank you all for such an impactful assessment, it'do add to my person like I always say. However, English is my first language and I do speak it fluently, I may also have some errors in my sentences which I admit and have taken care of it—reading more books, revising my proficiency, and other self improvement works. The problem is that: typo via keyboard, speed typing in mobile, feeling less concerned to the flow of the lang because while speaking, its not usually identified in where I stay, Nigeria. I appreciate what you all discussed and 've taken record of them. In not varying worlds, there are also justifications that seems provocative. One of the things I've learnt do far is that, people changes by day, there are more to improvement as well. I will also be proud of my reviews, even though some says it's not likewise. I'm not here for any argument but addressing such cases will make Wikipedia a better place. I love to see people correct me while I taken it to heart. On civilly, reverting should be done in reviews only if he/she have discussed that with the reviewer. Like I said, no one has found fault with my review, even when I give a little still promising truth of an article. What if I was about asking a second reviewer. Lastly, I appreciate all of you and your contributions but know that It's for the best. Thanks and will needs some piece of "good" advice. For reviewing, I'm stopping for now. Regards. — Safari ScribeEdits!Talk!17:45, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
The
Bertram Fletcher Robinson article's
GAN was obviously not thorough. The reviewer literally rewrote the GA criteria list with some AI bot and this was the only noteworthy thing the reviewer said:
"After a thorough assessment of Bertram Fletcher Robinson, I can affirm that it successfully meets the criteria for Good Article status on Wikipedia. The article is well-written, with prose that is clear, concise, and accessible to a broad audience, adhering to the Manual of Style guidelines in all respects, including the lead section, layout, and incorporation of lists. It is verifiable, with all references correctly presented and reliable sources cited inline for any content that could be reasonably challenged. There is no evidence of original research, copyright violations, or plagiarism. The article is broad in its coverage, addressing the main aspects of the topic while maintaining focus and avoiding unnecessary detail. It represents viewpoints neutrally, without editorial bias, and remains stable, not subject to ongoing edit wars or content disputes. Furthermore, it is appropriately illustrated with media that are tagged with their copyright statuses and have relevant captions, enhancing the reader's understanding of the subject."
We can see that this was just a rewrite using some artificial intelligence bot, further displaying the fact that this review was just rushed. Otherwise I see some redundancy in the prose as well as one of the sections being way too long. 750h+ | Talk 09:47, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
Two months ago, that may exceed our statue of limitations for reversion. The lead should be more comprehensive as well, but at a glance it's not a quickfail sort of situation where I'd jump to a GAR before posting on the talkpage.
CMD (
talk)
21:05, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
The main image also has obviously incorrect sourcing information (or the nominator is over 120 years old). —
Kusma (
talk)
21:19, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
Is this article really so bad that a quickfail was appropriate?
Is it normal for a GA reviewer to nominate an article they've reviewed for deletion without waiting for the nominator to make any appropriate improvements?
Jclemens (
talk)
00:30, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
Normally I would have left it alone, regardless of my concerns, but I've discussed the topic with the nominator and we both agreed to send it to AfD. In any case, I quick-failed on the rationale of Rule 3, which indicates that the subject needs broad and significant in-depth discussion. The discussion in the article is rather bare per reasons I've outlined in my comments on both the review page and in the AfD.
Has one ever considered Magneton? Pokelego999 (
talk)
00:34, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
Well, the quick fail and RfD are two separate acts. If you think the subject isn't notable, it can't be a GAN. Whether or not the reviewer wants to give the nominator enough time to find the sources is a bit up to them. Considering the AfD seems to be going towards a "redirect" verdict, it seems like it's suitably non-notable. No amount of work can make it notable.
I would be more sympathetic if the close paraphrasing wasn't ubiquitous and blatant as described. Good articles simply cannot contain any plagiarism. If there's an acceptable quick, unilateral GAR, it's done for these reasons.
Remsense诉10:26, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
This is the principal problem: you have been unable to understand for years that plagiarism is a serious problem.
Borsoka (
talk)
11:33, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
Still, none of the issues are outstanding—that is the key point. That and the fact that has been pointed out to you, you are
WP:INVOLVED so should revert you clousre and let a neutral reviewer pick this up.
Norfolkbigfish (
talk)
13:36, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
Please revert your close
Borsoka: per the GAR instructions, "After at least one week, if the article's issues are unresolved and there are no objections to delisting, the discussion may be closed as delist. Reassessments should not be closed as delist while editors are making good-faith improvements to the article." (emphasis added). Additionally, as you opened the reassessment, you are considered
INVOLVED.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
11:06, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
There's no interpretation to be had.
WP:GAFAIL applies to Good Article nominations, not Good Article reassessments. The reassessment process is outlined at
WP:GAR, which says that "After at least one week, if the article's issues are unresolved and there are no objections to delisting, the discussion may be closed as delist. Reassessments should not be closed as delist while editors are making good-faith improvements to the article." Clearly NorfolkBigFish was making improvements to the article, and so delisting it was out of process.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
14:44, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
I think at this point it would be fine to allow someone else to close the GAR now that eyes are on it, I agree that the GAR guideline says what it says.
Remsense诉14:54, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
I've made the backlog drives subpage "permanent" in the tab header to give it more visibility, since we've agreed that we ought to be having drives more often. We didn't agree on timing or number of backlog drives, though. Here's an inventory of most of the suggestions that seem applicable and possible:
We have three backlog drives a year
They are regular and recur in the same months every year
Some are themed/only address part of the backlog, to cut down on reviewer fatigue (this is proposal 14)
January and August look like good times
Swap Unreviewed nominations with Old nominations at Backlog Drives Progress (this is proposal 6)
In light of those, here is a proposal:
Three drives a year, in January, May, and September
The January drive is the "main" one, targetting all nominations, but especially old ones (ie, prop 6); bonus points are given for reviewing longer and older articles
The May drive is particularly newbie-friendly; we put extra effort into recruiting new reviewers, give points for mentorship, etc (I'm happy to brainstorm/co-ordinate on this)
The September drive is focused on some particular element of the backlog drive, and the co-ords will draw up a list of qualifying GANs in advance (possible examples: articles by editors with no GAs, articles by editors with more reviews than GAs, etc); points will still be given for reviews that aren't on that list, but the aim is to wipe out that list in particular.
In the earlier discussion, @
AirshipJungleman29 said I mean, sure, but all of them require people to do the things. If you want to showcase model reviews, reward good reviews, be a mentor, or anything else, get on with it. I stepped forward with GAR and have been basically running the process for a year. So, here I am, getting on with it. --
asilvering (
talk)
21:59, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Thank you very much. Regardless of whether we will have regular backlog drives (I expressed against regular backlog drive on Proposal 1 discussion and gave arguments), I liked very much to have a list of past drives at
Wikipedia:Good_articles/GAN_Backlog_Drives#Past Drives. I didn't know that we had this list. Anyway, the special permanent page for GA drives, even if we will not have many GA drives the future, is a good think that I appreciate. For example, we can have announcements of future drives or analysis of past drives there.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
22:14, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I like the proposal, although since the last drive was in March, I think it'd be too soon to have one this May. I'd like to see the next one about recruiting more reviewers—maybe with two streams of awards, "Reviewing" and "Mentoring". —
Bilorv (talk)
21:32, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I don't think it would be good to have a backlog drive this May, that's too soon. So the next drive would be September. Lots of time to figure out how best to make it newbie-encouraging. --
asilvering (
talk)
23:25, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
Sounds good to me. I considered those months but decided it was best to keep them at equal intervals, since my idea is that this will be a recurring thing with a fixed schedule. Since our most recent drive was all the way back in August of last year, September didn't seem too far away to me. But I don't think anyone will die of confusion if we end up with this year being March/July/October and then every drive thereafter is planned for January/May/September. (For all we know we won't stick with this thrice-yearly schedule anyway.) --
asilvering (
talk)
20:15, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Bilorv, how do you see this working? I understand you to mean something like dividing participants into two categories (newbies/reviewers and mentors), then giving a point for the completed review to the reviewer and the mentor? --
asilvering (
talk)
20:50, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't quite know. I think people would sort themselves by either
asking for a mentor or volunteering as a mentor.
NPP backlog drives often have some "re-reviewing" element with a barnstar, so serving as a mentor might earn you a "teamwork" barnstar. Maybe there would be some special barnstar for completing your first GA review. Or maybe the key element is just advertising (notifying WikiProjects, something well-timed in The Signpost, talk page messaging people we think could be interested). —
Bilorv (talk)
21:16, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
I nominated
U.S. Route 23 in Tennessee for GA status a while back, and the reviewer passed it with essentially no comments. That is extremely rare, especially for an article this long. I asked them about it, and they said that in general they thought it met the GA criteria, but weren't very familiar with the GA review process. As such, I would like to request a second opinion. I'm not asking for a reassessment; instead, I'd appreciate if someone would look over the article and suggest comments on the talk page in the same manner as the GA review process.
Bneu2013 (
talk)
22:09, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
The review is at
Talk:U.S. Route 23 in Tennessee/GA1. Not a pure checklist, but has no source checks and not too much explanation. Looking at the article, obvious questions emerge such as how the entire lengthy second paragraph of Route description could be sourced to two maps.
CMD (
talk)
00:10, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
The route description is sourced to a lot more than two maps. I'd appreciate if someone would be willing to take a look at it, though.
Bneu2013 (
talk)
01:41, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
In the look I took the paragraph is sourced to Tennessee Atlas & Gazetteer (Map) (2017 ed.) and
this one-page pdf. If there are other sources you should probably add them.
CMD (
talk)
02:41, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't think the title is itself a reason to do so. The lines between list articles and prose articles are sometimes blurry, and this is a case in point.
TompaDompa (
talk)
22:17, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
Go ahead and fix it manually; thanks. I had a look but can't tell what happened, but the bot did crash at around the time it should have promoted this article. I have an idea as to what caused the crash and will be trying to fix it soon -- it is happening every now and then.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:19, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
Child abuse in association football have been quickly failed for
WP:COPYWITHIN and
WP:OR. While the 1st is a quick fix (that I have done) there is no clear details about the later (see
Talk:Child abuse in association football/GA1). I have asked @
Schierbecker to provide more elaborate answer as I want to improve the article and did not receive any reply although the editor is active.
I understand there is no deadline here but not providing a coherent feedback from the beginning makes it hard to resolve the issues and - sometimes - contesting the editor decision as these decision are not made in vacuum and the assessor does not hold absolute powers to promote or fail an article.
I wonder if other editors can take a look and either become a
WP:3O or provide a more substance to the quick fail to help me improve the article. At the end of the day the GA process is there to help improve articles up to our standards and this is a very important topic that I truly want to get it right.
FuzzyMagma (
talk)
11:09, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't know what Schierbecker was thinking, but at a quick glance the first thing I notice is that there are five paragraphs of text (375 words) in the section §Definitions, of which the first sentence (36 words) is actually about child abuse in football; the remaining four paragraphs do not mention football at all and the sources all appear to be about child abuse more generally.
Once we get into the stuff which is actually about child abuse in football, it all seems to be random collections of stuff: for instance, all we are told about France is that "Ahmed G., former amateur football coach, was sentenced to 18 years for sexually abusing and raping young players." Is this an important fact about
Child abuse in association football? Is this the only, or most significant, case of child abuse in association football in France? It's unclear, because the only source is a contemporary news report. This is an article about a broad social issue, but it seems to be made up of a patchwork of random claims sourced to reports about individual examples of the issue: what it really needs is to be based on reliable sources about child abuse in football generally.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
12:05, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
The section title is “Known cases by country” not sure what are you confusing there.
The definition of child abuse in general is needed because it’s not different from football. It is not like there is a football specific kind of child abuse.
Separately from Caeciliusinhorto's insightful comments on this specific article, to answer the question of "contesting" a quickfail in general: there is no process for contesting a quickfail. If you think the reviewer was wrong and they aren't amenable to changing their opinion, you can always renominate the article. Keep in mind that any future reviewer may well agree with the first quickfail, and a failure to address valid concerns from prior reviews is explicitly a quickfail criteria in and of itself. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)12:23, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
I think it will be a huge waste of time to re-nominate the article without addressing the first reviewer comments. It will be a circular argument if the first reviewer did not comment properly and the next reviewer just agreed with them because they can read minds which I currently can’t (working on it. And that is why I am here
FuzzyMagma (
talk)
14:13, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
Sometimes, pinging or replying on an article's talk page doesn't necessarily notify an editor. Make sure to check the editor's talk page and inform them before posting here. — Safari ScribeEdits!Talk!18:58, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
Well, exactly. That is how it works though. Unless you think the GA Review was done in bad faith (in which case, this isn't the venue for a grievance), you can't change someone's mind about an article. If you fundamentally disagree with what they say, simply renominate. If you agree that it needs work, but want time to make those changes, just make the changes and renominate. You can't force someone to wait. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)07:11, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
Personally I think that raising the issue here (as indeed the OP has done) would be a legitimate course of action if you think the quick fail is simply inaccurate. That doesn't have to imply bad faith, merely that something fundamental was missed. Clearly not the case here, as we see from the replies - this quick fail was justified - but making someone renominate and go to the back of the queue again when maybe no other editor would have quick failed it, seems somewhat harsh. —
Amakuru (
talk)
10:37, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
I'd argue that the renomination should happen regardless, and a comment here stating your thoughts and allowing another editor to pick up the second review if they agred is a better course of action. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)11:18, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
What are your core sources establishing the subject of the article? Because at a glance, I can't see that the article has a backbone that forms its scope. Looking at the first 31 citations, only citations 1 and 2 discuss the subject of 'child abuse in assocation football', and then citations 28 and 31 discuss the more general subject of 'child abuse in sport' (the latter of the two being focused on Zambia specifically). The remaining sources may in instances provide support for the article, such as providing a definition of child abuse, but these should be supplementary. They shouldn't be predominant within the article. They also generally shouldn't be necessary. If a source doesn't comment on the article topic directly, it probably doesn't belong in the article. Consequently, there is copious material that isn't tied to the topic concretely and is probably extraneous. As is, the mainframe of the article is closer to a 'list of instances of child abuse in association football' with an unfocused definition section than it is to an article on 'child abuse in association football'.
Mr rnddude (
talk)
04:24, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
The only parts of the article that are
WP:DUE are the first paragraph of the "Definition" section and a highly summarised version of the "Children safeguarding in football" section. Everything else is extraneous information that should probably be cut. The "Statistics" section in particular strikes me as particularly
WP:SYNTH-like; this may be what the reviewer was referring to.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
10:15, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
GAN count of GAs now includes GAs that are now FAs or have been delisted
Per
this discussion I've changed ChristieBot to assign a GA promotion count to an editor by counting all GAs that were promoted, regardless of whether they are still GAs. There are a couple of pros and cons to this change:
SDZeroBot (which maintains the count used up to now) does not include any articles that are no longer GAs.
SDZeroBot does not include counts for editors whose name includes an apostrophe, though for Tim O'Doherty the maintainer did a manual update. I think Tim is the only editor active at GAN with an apostrophe in their name, so this was not a current problem.
ChristieBot does not include any GAs that predate the use of subpages for GAs (i.e. "/GA1" as part of the page name). SDZeroBot does include these. There are several hundred GAs like this but there are no active editors with more than a handful of GAs that old, so I hope this will have no noticeable effect on the counts.
As the nominator (
Norfolkbigfish) has
failed to detect several cases of plagiarism in the article
crusading movement for three weeks, I think the
reassessment process can be closed, and the article should be delisted. The article should as soon as possible be restored into the redirect page it used to be before Norfolkbigfish filled the article with texts copied from copyrighted material.
Borsoka (
talk)
02:55, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
The article has now been listed at
WP:CPN, which will handle the question of whether the article needs to be revdelled/redirected. If the copyright clerks decide yes, than the GAR close will be procedural. I suggest waiting for that.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
10:21, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
Older GARs needing comments
Posting here to encourage participation in reassessments from more people than the regulars at the GAR page. These are older discussions where improvement is not ongoing and which could use more participation.
GAN statistics tool now shows current state of the article
Per a suggestion from
Bilorv, the
GAN statistics tool has been updated to add a column that indicates if the article is currently a GA, FA, or neither. This has significantly slowed the tool down, so I may add a checkbox to make it optional to report this. By "slow", I mean it takes about a second for every ten GA reviews + nominations to be reported on. The most prolific GA reviewer/nominator has nearly two thousand articles to display, which means it will take their page about two or three minutes to refresh. For most people it should respond in under twenty seconds.
The tool looks for the strings "{{featured article}}" and "{{good article}}" in the article text, and assumes that anything that doesn't have either is either delisted or was not promoted. As usual, let me know of any issues.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
03:23, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
Thanks Mike, works for me on smaller accounts well, but time adds up fast as you note. Any chance checking for a category on the talkpage would be faster?
CMD (
talk)
04:36, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't think so -- the slowness is caused by having to open each of the GAs as a Wikipedia page, and doing that for the talk page probably wouldn't be faster. I just realized I could probably open the various GA listing pages and check for those, however, and similarly for the FAs. That could be faster.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
09:52, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
I just tried that change and reverted it; it was unreliable because so many GAs are still in the GA pages under names that are now redirects. I'll see if I can think of another way to do it, perhaps with categories.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:24, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
This nomination was opened for review by
Garethphua on 18 April but the actual review was never conducted; today,
750h+ failed the review, writing, I am failling this nomination as the reviewer is an unexperienced user with only 15 edits. Unfortunately, this is not the proper process—the nomination should not have been failed, but either the review unwound or deleted—and 750+'s advice to nominator
Nkon21, you may renominate the article, would have lost the nomination over six months of seniority in one fell swoop, since it dated back to 4 October 2023.
I have removed the inappropriate failure (in the form of a FailedGA template) from the article talk page and reinstated the original GA nominee template with page=2 and the 4 October 2023 date. Apologies to Nkon21 for the inconvenience. I hope that a more experienced reviewer ultimately selects your article to review.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
16:44, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
Sorry, i didnt understand how the GA review system works, i accidentaly opened the review and didnt know how to close it.
i didnt find the review instructions clear, i suggest those who know how to edit the instructions to do so. Thanks in advance and apologies for the inconvenience.
Garethphua (
talk)
04:23, 30 April 2024 (UTC)
I kinda forgot what was unclear, but could you add how to remove a nominatiom, i couldnt find the button or source to edit for it.
Garethphua (
talk)
03:04, 2 May 2024 (UTC)
Garethphua, that depends what you mean by "remove a nomination". If you mean to take the nomination entirely off the list, you would remove the template from the article talkpage, but that's not an expected process for new reviewers. If you mean how to close a review once you have started it, the instructions state to contact the nominator or to leave a note here. I'll add a wikilink for that second part if that helps.
CMD (
talk)
03:44, 2 May 2024 (UTC)
I couldn't help but notice the lack of activity in this GAN page: neither the nominator nor the reviewer has touched the review page since it was created. Can someone intervene?
Nineteen Ninety-Four guy (
talk)
14:37, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: I've passed the article
Aishwarya Rai Bachchan as GA earlier today and even updated the article's talk page as well as the Good Article nominations page. While ChristieBot has added the good article icon to the article, it is yet to leave a message on the nominator's talk page. Furthermore, the GA statistics tool recently created by you also shows the article as "Under review" at the time of writing. Would you please look into the matter? It would be greatly appreciated. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:12, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
ChristieBot crashed in the middle of that run; it is crashing about once every fifty or a hundred runs, for reasons I haven't yet figured out but am working on. It won't post that notification now so you may want to do so manually.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
21:34, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
Edit request
Hi, if someone here could action the edit request for
Software maintenance, that would be great. I would like to nominate the article at GAN, which I can't do until then. Thanks in advance
Buidhe paid (
talk)
03:06, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
Next step in helping new reviewers: Improved instructions or reviewing guide
I've got
WP:Good article mentorship up and running, but we should be taking other steps to help reviewers. First, I'd like to get
User:Thebiguglyalien/Good article reviewing guide into the process and make it into something practical. Would there be any interest in cleaning it up, moving it out of userspace, and making it into a more "official" guide for the reviewing process? Or perhaps to rework the instructions based on a condensed version of something like this? Our current instructions explain the technical aspects of starting and ending a review but say very little about the review process itself.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
01:19, 5 May 2024 (UTC)
I think some thought should be given to merging this with
WP:GANI.
WP:RGA is technically a guideline, but is so out of date I'm not sure it's supported by consensus. A page which combines them and
WP:WGN would be ideal.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
03:12, 5 May 2024 (UTC)
The question then is what a merged page would look like. Would it be a full detailed set of instructions like in my userspace page, or would it be a more condensed "here are the basics of what to do and what to check"? I definitely support merging WGN into this as well. At this point I wouldn't object to marking RGA with {{Historical}} or {{Superseded}} and making a revised GACR/GANI the guideline, if there's consensus for that.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
22:38, 6 May 2024 (UTC)
Well, RGA is so out of date that people have started adding reviewing instructions that should belong there directly to GANI (steps 1 & 3). I think what could happen is a thorough update of RGA to bring it to current standards, as befits its "guideline" status, and replacing any non-procedural instructions at GANI with a pointer to RGA. I think a boundary between the "what to do" and "what to check" is helpful, and if consensus comes in the future that it's better to have them together on the same page it can be merged then.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
23:04, 6 May 2024 (UTC)
Maybe I'll draft something more guideline-like and post it here for feedback, unless someone else wants to take a whack at this.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
22:54, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
GAR talk page notices
How long are you expected to wait between posting a notice on the talk page of a GA and opening a reassessment?
QuicoleJR (
talk)
17:26, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
Strictly speaking there's no requirement to post a notice prior to opening a GAR at all:
WP:GAR simply says "consider raising issues at the talk page".
Featured article review, which does require a talkpage notification, says "give article watchers two to three weeks to respond to concerns" so if you are leaving a note on the talkpage that seems like a reasonable timeframe to work with.
Caeciliusinhorto (
talk)
17:40, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
So, there is technically no requirement for a talk page notice for GAR, or to wait a specific amount of time after giving the notice?
QuicoleJR (
talk)
17:43, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
There's not. The idea originated with
this sprawling discussion and has not been widely practiced (I think I'm really the only one doing that). I've been waiting two weeks, although since I only try to have two GARs open at a time, it's been more intermittent than that.
Hog FarmTalk17:44, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
All the same, it's an excellent and civilized thing to do, and if the article is being watched by the GA nominator or anyone else who cares about it, the notice will very likely save the need for a GAR.
Chiswick Chap (
talk)
10:47, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
Suggestion for a GA for an article
Hi team, could anyone please consider the article
Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja (film). It is regarding a movie and when i done a normal check I felt its fine. Could anyone please go through it and can you give me any suggestions before submitting for GA
Paavamjinn (
talk)
22:05, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
You could ask in
WP:PR. Here, it is a place where you could ask for suggestions to improve the article to become GA or FA, or any higher-status class articles.
Dedhert.Jr (
talk)
14:39, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
While I greatly admire ZKang's work, I believe he fundamentally erred in failing this GAN on notability grounds, given that notability is not a GAN criterion. In the first place, taking instruction from
Wikipedia:What BLP1E is not, I seriously disagree that this is an example of BLP1E. Even if it were, that should have been an AfD matter, with the GAN put on hold until after the conclusion of the AfD discussion. Just wanted to hear what others think before putting this up for a renom. Cheers,
KINGofLETTUCE 👑🥬19:11, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
A few things: 1) yes, you are right to say that notability is not a GA criterion, but 2) they appear to suggest that they failed the review because the article didn't meet
GA criterion 3a), not purely on notability grounds, and 3) you could surely have brought this up on ZKang's talk page, rather than before the 1,200 page watchers here?
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
19:49, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
and also sort of as a general enquiry about whether or not notability ought to even be relevant to GANs. David's reply seems to say yes but I wonder if there are differing philosophies on this or if some more concrete guidance exists...
KINGofLETTUCE 👑🥬20:37, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
The banner quickfail criteria is for existing banners, not ones that could be added. Of course, if the situation is serious enough that banners could be added, it might be a quickfail for those serious reasons. The fail sounds partially related to
Wikipedia:Very short featured articles, of which there are indeed different philosophies. I suspect on a quick look at the article (without looking at the sources) that the question surrounding notability is more about framing (person vs event), and that is also perhaps philosophical.
CMD (
talk)
00:39, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
The "or needs" wording of
WP:QF reads clearly to me as being about ones that could be added. If it were only about existing ones, that part would be irrelevant. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
02:32, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
Well, it does say that they should also be "unquestionably valid", so failing because notability is suspect should probably be followed with an AfD.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
02:37, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
The "or needs" pays heed to the needs, which would be the "those serious reasons" I mentioned. The banner addition in that case is a symptom, whereas existing banners are a cause on their own as it shows the nominator has not bothered to clean up the article. I do not think this was technically a quick fail, as there was some review and a few days thought. That said, I would agree that this sort of fuzzy disagreement should be taken to another venue. Not sure AfD is right though, as a reshaping of the topic wouldn't delete the article.
CMD (
talk)
02:51, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
Would anyone be willing to review the aforementioned article? I assure the community here that this is not a drive-by nomination. I am the article's second-highest editor and the fifth-largest author. Furthermore, the four authors ranking above me in terms of authorship have been inactive for a long time. Victor Trevor last made an edit on English Wikipedia in October 2023, Soulparadox in April 2018, Light Show in March 2024 (though he has made only 37 edits to English Wikipedia since November 2021 and none to Zuckerberg's since March 2017), and Likeanechointheforest since May 2023. Hence, I look forward to someone taking it up for GA-class assessment. I will most willingly respond to any comments made on the GA Review talk page so that the article can be improved to GA-class. Regards and yours faithfully,
MSincccc (
talk)
07:52, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
You should be aware that GA nominations may take a long time to be reviewed, usually many months, and there's no order or predictable timetable to it. You'll just have to be patient. In the meantime, why don't you review someone else's article? It is not required, but you can benefit your own nomination by just reducing the number of open nominations awaiting review. That way, when a new potential reviewer shows up, there would be a higher chance that yours will be the one selected.
Cambalachero (
talk)
16:04, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
I'm not discrediting your work here, but fifth-largest author is a fairly generous phasing when it's 2.5% of the prose. I understand that the other authors are not active, but some things are just not reasonable to GA when no single author has contributed to that degree.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
16:20, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
I'm inclined to agree; I want to assume good faith here, but taking an article mainly written by others and doing a couple tweaks before submitting it to GAN seems pretty firmly against the spirit of things here. When other people have done far more for the article, even if they're inactive, they're the one who deserve the recognition, not the final person to add a couple finishing touches.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
17:38, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Remember that the GA process is about the article, not the editor. The rules about the "main" editor are only meant to prevent clashes over who gets to decide if the article is ready for nomination, to answer the points that may be made during the discussion, and other tasks related to the process. It's not meant to be an award. If a user finds a decent but abandoned article and nobody else minds if he does so, he may nominate it and manage the discussion as if he had written it himself.
Cambalachero (
talk)
17:46, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Totally agree. If Stephen Hawking wrote the best article Wikipedia has ever seen and forgot to nominate it for GA/FA, I wouldn't insist that it remain B-class forever just because he's dead and no one could hope to improve it. MSinccc has posted an appropriate message on the talk page, and if the nomination is successful, I don't think anyone would mind one of the original editprs putting a GA badge on their userpage if they return.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
17:50, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
I did leave a message on the article talk page. To note all facts, all the authors above me are presently inactive as I have previously mentioned. In that case, the article will never come to GA-class status. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:01, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Please understand that I'm still learning and growing, being a kid. I've dedicated considerable time and energy to contribute significantly to all the successful GA promotions attributed to me. My sincere desire was to elevate the aforementioned article to GA-class, and I've diligently worked towards that goal. I eagerly await feedback from others. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:00, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Well, I've made numerous prose additions to the articles of William and Catherine. I've never run a bot on those articles (the ones I ran had to be reverted as they were from Google Books). Furthermore, I've given up my claims of authorship on the Sherlock Holmes article. Also, I did contribute significantly to Philip's article to make it GA-worthy. Regards and yours faithfully.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:44, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Because you have consistently misrepresented your contributions at the expense of others. Because you have repeatedly been told your approach is wearing. Because you seem to regard GAs as a right. And because you have never attempted to change your approach even when being called out on being wrong (see discussions passim, cf. Sherlock, cited above).
——Serial Number 5412918:19, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
The Sherlock Holmes article and its drive-by nomination have become a strawman by now. I have apologised and not repeated my offence. I am open to suggestions to improve my work here, and I have kept my word. Regarding this article, I have contributed to it over the last two-plus years and am quite familiar with its content. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:35, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
It might come across better if you framed any future posts in this vein along the lines of explaining the work you have done on the article, your familiarity with the sources, etc, as opposed to just saying "I have such-and-such authorship percentage." The first is substantive, the second is merely a statistic. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)18:43, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
That's practically the opposite of what I suggested. Do you understand what I mean when I say "explaining the work you have done on the article, your familiarity with the sources"? ♠
PMC♠
(talk)18:59, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Premeditated Chaos Apologies for any confusion. I'm well-versed in the events to be covered in Catherine and William's articles, the appropriate sources to cite, and the preferred wording. I've extensively worked on citation parameters and articles using British English. Currently, I'm focused on articles about David Cameron and Liz Truss, two former British prime ministers. In the future, I aim to bring articles on William, Catherine, and Bill Gates to FAC once I find relevant book sources and more high-quality content to support the nominations. Being a child, I'm open to suggestions and would appreciate mentorship, especially regarding GA nominations like this one for Zuckerberg. Wishing you all a great day ahead (though it's already evening here). Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
19:13, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
There you go. That's the kind of post you should be making when you're preparing to bring these articles to GA. Don't highlight authorship percentages, highlight the substantive work you've done. You'll get much less pushback. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)19:28, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Just to note that
Liz Truss was promoted to FA last October, and the FA nominee is still active as a steward on the article. I’m not sure it needs any additional work done on it. -
SchroCat (
talk)
04:10, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
SchroCat has correctly highlighted the inexactitude of
MSincccc's involvement in
Liz truss; re. Zuckerberg, you are 2.6% author and as far as added prose goes... there is an anonymous IP—with 1.9%—who have contributed more. Sorry about that!
17:56, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
If someone genuinely wanted to get
Mark Zuckerberg to GA, I assume they'd do the basics and at least sort out the
WP:LEAD, which is full of novel information. Lawyering about authorship when the basics haven't been done is not promising. If it is not withdrawn I am inclined to quickfail it.
CMD (
talk)
11:42, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
I would appreciate it if a reviewer could provide some comments that I can then endeavour to address. I would be glad if a reviewer left some comments which I will try to follow. Regards
MSincccc (
talk)
13:31, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis I meant that instead of quick failing the nomination, it would be helpful if the reviewer who eventually assesses the article leaves constructive comments that I can address to improve the chances of the article becoming a successful GA. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
15:46, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis I've condensed the lead section and relocated all citations except for the Forbes references, which pertains to net worth, to the article body. I'm proceeding in good faith and welcome any feedback that could enhance the article's chances of becoming a GA. Regards and yours faithfully,
MSincccc (
talk)
06:28, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
It could be integrated into the article body, and I'm prepared to do so. However, if we opt for this approach, it would need to be applied consistently for all billionaires whose net worth is sourced from either Bloomberg or Forbes and deemed relevant for inclusion on Wikipedia. This includes figures like Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Jensen Huang, among others.
Additional comment: @
Chipmunkdavis, Could you please review the article and provide feedback there? This way, I can address the comments and work towards the article achieving GA status. It's just a request. Regards and yours faithfully,
MSincccc (
talk)
07:01, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
I'm not involved in this, but I, for one, find it extremely irritating when GA nominators nominate obviously-subpar articles, without a clue why they are subpar, and then expect reviewers to hold their hand as they go step by step through a rewrite of the article. That is not what reviewers are for. If you are going to nominate an article, you should (1) understand the GA criteria, at the level of being able to conduct a competent review, (2) review the article you are about to nominate, yourself, and find the points where it might not meet the criteria, and (3) fix the article, on your own, to clean up the problems you found in your self-review.
What you seem to be expecting instead is that someone else does all of the work in finding problems, and all of the work in describing step-by-step how to fix those problems, and then you get all the credit for the GA for being their typist. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
07:26, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't wish to claim credit for a GA if the article is being improved based on the reviewer's feedback. CMD suggested removing the Forbes citations related to Zuckerberg's net worth from the article lead. My response was that if we remove them, it should be done consistently for other billionaires' articles as well. Currently, the article is well-written with no cleanup tags, unreliable sources, and clear and consistent prose. I've been working on the article for over two years. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
07:37, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
My suggestion is that the article in question, as well as others you mention, adhere to
WP:LEAD. Such adherence is per
WP:GACR a component of being "well-written".
CMD (
talk)
10:02, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis This is the first comment left by a user who has just made three edits on English Wikipedia-You could possibly mention the many controversies he has been in, as well as the popular jokes about him being a lizard. Please look into the matter. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
13:56, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis Should I renominate the article after having saved the page? It is very unlikely that the user will post any further comments. Looking forward to knowing from you. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
05:21, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
Please do not close the review yourself. The standard course of action is likely that it will be closed and the nomination restored to the original date, but that does not need to happen after one day, others may comment.
CMD (
talk)
05:26, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis Can the review be closed if the nominator hasn't posted any comments beyond the opening ones and has been inactive for more than a week? Looking forward to knowing from you. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
07:59, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis Who will be closing the review in that case then?
WP:GAN/I#N4a states that the article can be re-nominated in such a situation by the nominator. Looking forward to knowing from you. Regards
MSincccc (
talk)
17:28, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
Per my comment earlier on the standard course of action, if that is followed you will not need to renominate as the old nomination will be restored.
CMD (
talk)
07:01, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
Hi. I wrote a biographical article that went through DYK and did well there (51,000 views). I would like to improve the article and bring it up to GA status. I'm an experienced editor but I've never edited for GA, so I would like to work with a mentor who is experienced with GA reviews and could make editing feedback or suggestions. Main issues might be prose quality and breadth of coverage.
I'm currently in the "2024 Election Wiki Scholars" WikiEdu course, so they can give me guidance on various technical aspects. Please let me know if you or somebody you know might mentor me with this effort. Thanks!
ProfGray (
talk)
12:07, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
Hi, I did not post there because that is for new GA reviewers, not for editors hoping to nominate for a GA. Right?
ProfGray (
talk)
12:55, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
It's
Jex Blackmore, who might be seen as controversial, but so far there has been no edit warring, just some vandalism during the DYK spike in views. I'm a scholar of religious studies and I came across this intriguing person.
ProfGray (
talk)
13:03, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
(
edit conflict)If you aren't feeling brave enough to nominate this for GA right away (at a very cursory glance there are no major red flags!) I'm happy to take a look at the article and give you some feedback – looks interesting! Aside from asking here, you might consider
Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Women in Green. Blackmore is arguably technically out of their scope, but their sister project
women in red explicitly includes "women and other gender minorities" and there may well be people watching that talkpage but not this one with relevant thoughts. — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk •
contribs)
09:28, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
Talk:Mark Zuckerberg/GA3 should be removed. The review was taken by a user who has 4 edits and wrote: You could possibly mention the many controversies he has been in, as well as the popular jokes about him being a lizard..
750h+13:19, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
As far as I can see everything worked correctly -- the nominator was notified and the GAN was removed from the main page. The bot runs every twenty minutes and takes about eight or ten minutes to run so in the worst case you could be waiting thirty minutes after you complete a fail or pass for the bot to do its job.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
10:53, 11 May 2024 (UTC)
Certainly not best practice. If a reviewer opens a review page and does not want to proceed, and no actual review has happened, they can request that the page be deleted which allows for a new page to be created. You could request that. Otherwise, we can reset the nomination date for the new review to the original one.
CMD (
talk)
04:27, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
I just adjusted the close on the review page to be a withdrawn reviewer rather than a failure in addition to updating the article talk page to restore the nomination's seniority and remove the improper "FailedGA". Thank you,
Spinixster, for bringing this to our attention.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
04:32, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
ChristieBot is unable to transclude the GA review to
Talk:Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip (2023–present), which is semi-protected. As a result it's been crashing every run trying to do so, and so has not been updating the main GAN page. Per
WP:UAL it seems as though ChristieBot should have the extended-confirmed permission which would allow it to edit this page, but it can't. I'm about to go to work and so don't want to edit the code since I won't be around to see if it works, but if someone could either give the bot the permission, if that can be done without going through an approval process, or manually transclude the GA review, that should fix it. The former is the preferable fix if it can be done quickly since that way it would be definite that that's what the problem is -- UAL does seem to say bots automatically have the permission so I suppose the problem could be due to something else. Anyway, thanks for any help with this.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:13, 16 May 2024 (UTC)
This was a bug in the library. I've added a workaround but the transclusions may not work properly right away; I'll monitor them and fix any that fail manually until it is working reliably. It is not going to be possible for the bot to transclude reviews for protected pages; those will always have to be done manually.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
21:20, 16 May 2024 (UTC)
Should be a rare enough occurrence. Is there somewhere the bot dumps an error message noting the need for manual intervention we could look at?
CMD (
talk)
02:32, 17 May 2024 (UTC)
The bot currently has a couple of different ways of handling errors. Errors that are going to cause the same problem over and over again (e.g. it can't parse a GAN template because the nominator has created it manually and messed up the parameters) prevent it from adding that nomination to the GAN page, so it reports those in a section at the end of
WP:GAN. That's not suitable here, because this is a one-time error: once the bot has tried to transclude the review it never tries again. The bot also writes some errors to
User talk:ChristieBot/Bug messages, which is intended more for my use -- it tracks unexpected events so I can figure out if there are things I can do to make the bot more reliable. I could have the bot write to that page, but I don't think it would be worth anyone watching it for this super-rare event -- this is the only time it's occurred in the last year and a half. I could have the bot leave a message here on the GAN talk page if that would be OK? The other notifications the bot leaves will still work -- the talk page messages, for example. At the moment there is some activity around
the bug, so it might be the case that the people who maintain the library will fix it in which case it will just start working again.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
14:10, 17 May 2024 (UTC)
Return and Query
@
GAR coordinators:
Hi all, hope that you're doing well. After some (extensive) time away I've been getting back into the swing of things (and sorting through my many notifications). I noticed I was rather fairly delisted for inactivity. Not sure that we have any policy on re-activation/addition; shall I run again for approval, or what is the thought? Thanks!
IazygesConsermonorOpus meum05:07, 18 May 2024 (UTC)
Is there any longer a distinction between these two (now that nominations are simply sorted by date), except that the "Highest priority" box seems to have fewer entries? If not, should we merge the two boxes together? UndercoverClassicistT·
C09:25, 16 May 2024 (UTC)
The lists are slightly different (the fifth entry currently showing for me is
Blackpink for the oldest unreviewed noms, and
William L. Keleher for the most urgent). Whether they are sufficiently different for it to be valuable to have two separate lists is another matter: currently four of the five entries are the same.
Caeciliusinhorto (
talk)
18:42, 18 May 2024 (UTC)
My question is whether my standard of editing is anyway near GA-level, and if it is worth bringing any of these articles to GA level? Any advice would be appreciated, and no problem if the feedback is that I am far off. thanks.
Aszx5000 (
talk)
18:53, 19 May 2024 (UTC)
Without doing an actual review, it's difficult to say whether the prose is great, but it's certainly laid out in a good way and everything is cited. I'd suggest picking your best one and nominating it. The first review should give you a good indication of what the reviews are like. For what I see, they look like they'd be pretty likely to pass after fixing issues from a reviewer.
Thanks for that Chiswick Chap. I am also pretty active on WikiCommons and do try and hunt for images that help explain things in the articles (either historically, technically, or as examples of leading routes). Delighted that it made an impression as well. thanks again,
Aszx5000 (
talk)
15:24, 20 May 2024 (UTC)
I notice that as I have cleaned up the climbing topic articles that IPs have returned to take an interest in them. I would love to see if I could take a lot of the key articles in climbing to GA-level.
Aszx5000 (
talk)
15:26, 20 May 2024 (UTC)
Is there a page where people looking for a QPQ (GA review for a GA review) can seek out one another, if not, should it be created or would that be discouraged?
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
10:36, 27 May 2024 (UTC)
No, there isn't, and suggestions to create an "official" page of this type were
discussed and did not find widespread support, and many people are skeptical that it is a good idea at all. —
Kusma (
talk)
12:14, 27 May 2024 (UTC)
One of the reasons the GA process had a bad reputation a decade ago was the practice of mutual positive reviews with minimal scrutiny. So any structure for QPQ should have something in place to prevent low quality reviews and quick passes. —
Kusma (
talk)
14:25, 27 May 2024 (UTC)
Hello, this is exactly what it says. I passed this article for the
Vinland Saga anime series far too quickly (combination of factors, including should've known better), as pointed out by
Reidgreg. When I raised the possibility of a GAR, they were hesitant due to how recent the GA was and recommended I bring the subject up here. Thinking back, I was wrong to pick up and review the article as I was then, and a second opinion or re-review of the article is needed.
ProtoDrake (
talk)
14:47, 28 May 2024 (UTC)
Hi
ProtoDrake, thank you very much for bringing this up here. Regarding the review,
Talk:Vinland Saga (TV series)/GA1 is unfortunately insufficient, it does not indicate any review of the article. The article should receive a full review (see
Wikipedia:Reviewing good articles). Regarding steps, this is recent enough (12 May) that I don't think a GAR is needed, the review pass can simply be reverted. You are the only editor (besides Christiebot) of the review page, so you could tag it as
WP:G7 if you still feel it wrong to pick up the review, and do not want to do a full review and would like someone else to instead. (You could also I suppose tag it as G7 and reopen it yourself again, if for some reason you want to both review it yourself and have a technically fresh start.) If you have questions about reviewing, you can always raise it here or discuss with a
WP:GAMENTOR. Best,
CMD (
talk)
02:20, 29 May 2024 (UTC)
Mysterious auto-failure
See
this notice on my Talk. I believe this happened because the
page was moved (undiscussedly), thus making the nomination page appear not to exist, since it is under the older page title. The page's Talk itself doesn't show it as having failed. In any case, I'd like to just erase the nomination, since no review ever took place, and it's either falsely shown as failed or as awaiting a second opinion (when no first was ever given).
Zanahary (
talk)
20:23, 31 May 2024 (UTC)
Zanahary, don't you want the article reviewed at GAN? We could "erase the nomination", but that would lose all of its seniority. It was indeed the page move that caused the problem, because while the article moved, the review page is still under the article's original name; I'm not sure whether it's best to see if the article gets moved back, or just move the review page now, and let it get moved back to its original name if the current request to restore the original name prevails.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
23:44, 31 May 2024 (UTC)
Maybe let's wait until we see the result of the page move, but I would rather just start again without seniority than have it marked as second opinion needed, which is a designation I imagine scares off any would-be reviewers who aren't very experienced with the process. I think it's enticing enough a topic that the loss of seniority would be alright.
Zanahary (
talk)
23:46, 31 May 2024 (UTC)
It can be started again with seniority by simply editing the timestamp in the nominations template. However, it looks as if the problem is that the page mover agrees to reverse the move but cannot do so for technical reasons? If so, and there's no disagreement about moving the page back, I can do that -- anyone with the page mover right (which includes all admins and a few others) can do that.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
12:32, 1 June 2024 (UTC)
Thank you very much @
Mike Christie! I see now on its Talk it is listed as unreviewed, but on the nominations page it says it wants a second opinion. Is it possible to resolve this to indicate that it's awaiting review, not a second opinion?
Zanahary (
talk)
01:08, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
No, BlueMoonset
fixed it by resetting it to the next page number without changing the timestamp. And thanks for removing the move request; that was careless of me -- I should have done that when I did the move.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
01:56, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I adjusted the GA nominee template so that rather than being a "second opinion" request, it's treated as a regular nomination awaiting a reviewer, with no loss of seniority. Sorry,
Zanahary, I meant to post that here, but got distracted by some incoming email. I hope the nomination gets picked up soon; there are, unfortunately, several dozen older noms also waiting. I think there's a GAN backlog drive coming in July, so maybe then if not before. Best of luck!
BlueMoonset (
talk)
02:46, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
Hello everyone. I'm looking for advice since I haven't really encountered this kind of thing before. The review page for
Shirt (song) (link
here) was created 16 days ago and I was told it would be started by the end of the month. I reminded them a week after that, and they still said they were busy. I gave it another week, and I see
they went on a wikibreak on 31 May. Requesting a 2O; should I get a new reviewer?
PSA 🏕️🪐 (please make some noise...)
06:36, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
Further to the
above discussion(pinging
AirshipJungleman29,
Premeditated Chaos,
Skyshifter, &
Kusma), I understand the issues that may arise with a one-on-one voluntary QPQ reviewing and I agree that the concept will sacrifice the quality of reviews. A potential alternative solution could be a discussion space where it pairs up 3-5 users and then A reviews B, B reviews C, and C reviews A's articles, thereby mitigating the COI in each review, I am happy to set it up and coordinate. Thoughts?
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
03:28, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
I would submit my GANs to one of these!
Especially if cross-pollination is encouraged, both in people being invited to join the review circles (we wouldn't want them to get stale editorially) and people within the circle encouraged to comment on GANs in the circle other than their primary.
Remsense诉06:08, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
I think it's shaping up nicely! It may also be useful to allow users to indicate their preference on which other article they'd like to review. —
TechnoSquirrel69 (
sigh)
19:42, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
We seem to have enough participants in this thread to conduct a test run. It may also be beneficial to keep the trial more lowkey and see how things turn out before opening the process to general participation. I don't have a strong objection, however, if other editors think differently. —
TechnoSquirrel69 (
sigh)
01:50, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis: The coordinator would be another individual and would pair and notify users, I am happy to assume the role. If there's another way it could work I am open to ideas.
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
02:10, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
Moving sections (sport)
Hi guys - I know I've asked this previously, but the cue sports section (within other sports) now has 200 entries. Cricket has a section of its own, and has 51 less GA articles. Do you think we could swap them around? I get that cue sports aren't quite as populated as some of our other topics, such as football or motorsport (I'm working on it though!), but it is significantly larger than one we already have. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)13:01, 24 May 2024 (UTC)
Furthermore, if I recall you asked back in the Vector 2010 era, we are in the bold new Vector 2022 world where the lists are vertically compressed. I would support creating a lv3 Cue sports heading in recognition of the substantial work done in that topic, and the usability of the lists. Please don't do it boldly though, lv3 might have technical ramifications. However, I see no reason it can't be split into multiple lv5s now, that can all be moved together later if there is consensus to split. I would appreciate a split by sport, I saw at a glance some pool and some snooker, there might be others, but it's not easy to tell from some event titles, and obviously impossible to just tell from the biographies. As for downgrading Cricket, interesting question and we are
about to lose another GA there, but doesn't need to happen to split off Cue sports.
CMD (
talk)
13:28, 24 May 2024 (UTC)
Sure, I wouldn't make the change myself. There are a few issues with doing changes by specific sport, as there's quite a bit of overlap. Almost all snooker players have played pool or billiards (and vise versa). The other issue is that we have "snooker" but then also a mismatch of all other cue sports. We'd have to have an "other cue sports" topic, which I'm not a fan of as it suggests it's lesser than snooker.
I do think there is a suitable bio Vs non-bio split which would be suitable if there was a level 3 header for it. (~60 bios, with the remainder split between tournaments , governance and articles about the different games). Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)13:58, 24 May 2024 (UTC)
Don't mind a bio split, mostly coming from the angle of being a bit more informative to those less familiar with the various sports in question.
CMD (
talk)
15:24, 24 May 2024 (UTC)
ChristieBot only cares about the sections of the GAN page; it doesn't interact with the GA sections at all. If this won't change the GAN page organization or create new nomination categories or keywords it shouldn't require any changes to ChristieBot.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
13:24, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
I think this would be more for Novem, because the GA promotion script uses the different headers. Good to know ChristieBot has no issues though. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)13:56, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
Guidance on nomination process
With respect to the assistance of the nominator, I am having a few problems completing a GAN review of
Rayman (video game) and need some guidance. Some of these problems are compounded by delays in me responding to the nominator, but I'd really appreciate some feedback so I can improve how to handle situations like this nomination for best practice in the future.
Basically, the nominator, despite their best intentions, has largely contributed to the article by rewriting the prose. Where they have done that, it is riddled with mistakes. As seen in the
review, nearly every sentence of the article has some issue or other that needs to be fixed, mostly in terms of tense and wording. That is fine and I am working through that with them, but I am only at the copyediting stage of the review. I'm not sure the reviewer understands some of the feedback and whether I could do better in explaining to them. For instance, a suggestion to 'omit' something from the article led to them adding that word in multiple places. Or some substantive feedback, such as suggesting the topic sentences of review paragraphs thematically reflect the content, seem to be ignored. I feel like what I am doing is really, in the end, directing them to write word for word what I feel the article should be to meet the standard.
How can I best help the nominator, and how should I best handle a review process like this where the nominator has good intentions and is trying their best, but there is a lot of quality assurance issues in their contributions and nuance that is being missed?
VRXCES (
talk)
22:57, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
Honestly, if the article is not up to GA quality, and the nominator is having trouble understanding the fixes that would be necessary to bring it to GA quality, you may simply need to fail the nomination. There is no shame in doing this as a reviewer. It is the nominator's responsibility to make sure the article meets the criteria. An inability to understand what looks to me to be fairly simple feedback is not something you're responsible for. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)23:18, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
750h+, per the note at the top of the page, it is best practice to attempt to speak to the nominator first before dragging them to a public noticeboard. Have you tried to do so? ♠
PMC♠
(talk)07:55, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
It is best to message on their talk page. I left a message there almost an hour before this was opened, please add to it if you wish.
CMD (
talk)
08:58, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
Very weirdly, this was partially clerked by a user and an IP. Given no activity from the reviewer, I have properly reset the template.
CMD (
talk)
02:18, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
What to do when a reviewer picks up an article scheduled for a circle
I started a review for an article that I later found out was scheduled for one of the
GA circles that
GMH Melbourne is organizing. I think those circles are a good idea, but I'm mentioning this here since this conflict will probably come up again and it would be good to make it clear what the expectations are. I think the point of the circles is to avoid substandard QPQ reviewing, but guarantee a review of the participants' nominations. If someone outside the circle picks up one of the articles, I think that's a good thing -- it means the person scheduled to review no longer has to do that review (though we might encourage them to pick up another article instead). I don't think there's any reason for a reviewer to deliberately avoid articles scheduled for circles, though I wouldn't deliberately pick one either.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:50, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: I've also been trying to come up with a process for when this situation occurs. Two options I have thought of are a) asking the user to provide comments on the other reviews in the review circle, or b) ask the user to review another article in the GAN list in the spirit of fairness. I also agree that we shouldn't prevent articles scheduled for circles from being reviewed.
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
12:47, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
There shouldn't be any pressure not to review articles that are listed as available for review. If the list at WP:GAN wasn't representative of the ones actually available, I'd feel less inclined to look through it and start reviewing a nom. They should be available to anyone up until the moment that it's decided the nom is part of a circle, and once it is decided, the review page should be created.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
14:19, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, this. Another layer of friction for reviewers is also likely to be especially offputting for people who have never reviewed before, and discouraging new reviewers seems like a decidedly undesirable outcome.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
14:35, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
If this initiative is to go forward, perhaps the circles could be organised in advance, allowing those involved to 'soft nominate' articles and only fully nominate them when the circle is agreed. This should allow them to be picked up very quickly by the other members of the circle.
CMD (
talk)
14:24, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
I don't think there's a need for that -- it would add more overhead to the circles, which seem to be moving pretty quickly at the moment (a good thing). I like GMH's suggestion that if a circle article is picked up, the editor who was scheduled to review it should be encouraged to pick a random other article to review instead.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
14:27, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
Perhaps I should add a message at {{GARC-new-circle}} saying "If another user starts a review you were assigned before you were able to, kindly find another article to review at
WP:GAN and inform the circle below."
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
01:10, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
Does a previous failure to meet GA criteria stay on?
I recently reviewed and promoted
Tamil Nadu to Good Article status. It was unsuccessfully nominated a decade ago and the old notification of failure to meet GA is on the Talk page. Does that notification stay on the Talk page, even though it's now a GA? It seems to contradict the current status unless read carefully.
Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (
talk)
13:23, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
GAN sorting uses different categories than Good Article nominations?
Is there a reason why
User:SDZeroBot/GAN sorting uses a different category system than
Wikipedia:Good article nominations? I was looking for a few articles in "GAN sorting" to see how long they had been waiting for reviews, but the categories don't match up at all; the only way to find an article was to do word searches by the article name. For example,
Charlemagne is listed under the "History" category in "Good Article nominations", but under "Culture/Biography" in "GAN sorting";
Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth is listed under "Social sciences and society/Law" in "Good Article nominations", but under "Geography/Regions/Oceania" in "GAN sorting". It would be helpful if both lists used the same categories.
Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (
talk)
13:44, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
The bot's sorting is done automatically using a machine learning tool, and includes articles under every topic it thinks is relevant (so you will see that Charlemagne, for example, is listed as "Geography/Regions/Europe/Western Europe" and "History and Society/History" among other topics). I imagine they differ because the ORES classification was developed after the already-existing GA system, and they weren't concerned with making them compatible - the ORES system the bot uses is used to categorise e.g. AfDs as well as GAs, which had developed its own categorisation.
I suppose we could change the way the
WP:GAN page works to sort articles using the bot rather than the current system, but that seems like a bunch of work for no clear benefit.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
13:55, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
The benefit is that it makes it easier to use both pages. There is no way to use the Sorting page to sort by the categories on the GA nominations page. Suppose I want to see the oldest article in the History category on the GA Nominations page, to review it because someone’s been waiting a long time for it. There’s no way to do that, because the History articles are scattered about by an entirely different category system, putting Charlemagne in “Culture/Biography”. There’s no way to see the oldest “Law” articles waiting for a review: the decision of the High Court of Australia (Fair work) is sorted under “Geography”. I don’t see any benefit from having a sorting system that isn’t based on the categories used on the Good Articles nomination page.
Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (
talk)
14:09, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
There’s also the point that relying on a bot/AI to determine the categories is less useful than relying on the judgment of the nominator who decides which category to put an article in when they nominate it. The decision of the Australian High Court in the Fair Work article is notable as an article about an important legal issue from the highest court in Australia. But the bot ignored that, and decided it was most notable because of its geographic location. Judgment by a human is more accurate here than a bot.
Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (
talk)
14:15, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
If you don't want to rely on the AI classification (I never do!) then you shouldn't use the bot which uses AI classification. You can use
User:ChristieBot/SortableGANoms if you want a sortable list which uses the manual categories. (But in the specific case you are talking about the bot did classify
Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth under History and Society/Politics and government; the ability to classify a nomination into multiple relevant categories seems like a useful feature actually!)
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
14:41, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
they're all getting difficult to read due to the giant walls of text. what are people's thoughts on how to split? ...
sawyer * he/they *
talk19:37, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
Could split United States history into a subsection, which would make a small difference although I suspect that subsection would remain in need of splitting sooner rather than later. There are a couple of options for European history, British Isles history seems an obvious one as being easy to define geographically and has quite a few items, splitting on continental Europe geographically is a bit more tricky with anachronisms (eg. what do you do with
Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin), although clearly defined regions like Italy might work. There's probably a couple of obvious subgroups for Monarchy, Royalty, and Nobility with 20+ units, perhaps staring with Roman/Byzantine.
CMD (
talk)
02:34, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
yeah i think splitting geographically will make the most sense, even with edge cases. splitting off British & US-American items would be a great first step ...
sawyer * he/they *
talk02:44, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
Many of the figures in Historical figures - other are miscategorized. Many of them are nobility, and should be put in the Royalty and nobility section. Some are military figures, and should be put in the military people section. Religious figures should put under religion, artists under their respective sections, etc. There's even some animals, which should be filed under Animal domestic breeds, types, and individuals.
For politicians, monarchs, nobility, etc. it seems like they could be split by continent.
Ah, didn't realise you'd already started. I'll handle the 12 moved, despite personal misgivings that the animals were likely mostly respectable historical figures.
CMD (
talk)
15:14, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
i'll start moving some of the "other" figures into their proper sections, so that we can know what the actual makeup of the "other" section is. ...
sawyer * he/they *
talk15:15, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm not strongly opinionated, aside from feeling it would be best to have something clear and consistent for animal individuals. Might split them into their own lv5 for a start, there's about 25 and I'm not seeing the natural link with breeds/types.
CMD (
talk)
15:40, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
I've split off the individuals (there were 30, although given the articles are just single names the line length is relatively short) and saved
Olaf the Peacock. Would be good to hear more thoughts on where they should go.
CMD (
talk)
16:16, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
Shifted Judy as well and finished the matching. If there is a consensus to move them, should be easier to now move them all together.
CMD (
talk)
02:01, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
Do aviators fall under the subject section Transport?
Asking because unlike some of the other subject areas, Transport does not mention related people/professions as included, and none of the nominations currently there are for biographies.
AddWittyNameHere13:14, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
For what it's worth, when I reviewed
Jean Batten, the article was placed under world history, historical figures: other. However, there is a section within transport entitled air transport people which might also be an option (and in fact I'm wondering if I put Batten in the wrong place).
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
23:31, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
Good to know I'm not the only person uncertain of where to place a nomination, then! Mine might be a little more "squarely" placed in transport than Jean Batten because it's about an aviation pioneer that was also an airline transport pilot, so guess I'll go for transport, I suppose, but yeah, world history - historical figures was my other guess. (It could even technically fit under military because he was a military pilot for a brief portion of his career, too--but that's not what his notability comes from, so not a great fit altogether)
AddWittyNameHere23:39, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Trainsandotherthings Yeah I agree that Jean Batten fits better under "air transport people" than "world history, historical figures: other". That historical figure section is massive (400+ articles) while air transport people only has 9. Jean Batten's article and achievement is also similar to
Juan Bielovucic, who is already listed within the air transport people category.
OhanaUnitedTalk page13:57, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm not too sure if this article meets the criteria for what makes a good article. At a glimpse:
Amateurish prose: Indeed, due to the fact these places...
Thus in the goal to inherit the company, Fusajiro was adopted...
Fusajiro then has the idea of using the Hanafuda cards of lesser quality...
Many other examples of this.
Awkward wikilinking: Just as Hanafuda cards were allowed again in 1885 so too did occidental playing cards (Standard 52-card deck) become allowed...
Grammar errors: ...these western cards so called "Trump" by the japanese population...
Randomly inserted sentences: (The sen is a subdivision of the Japanese yen which became obsolete in 1954.)
Questionably sourced media (one is straight up ripped from
Eurogamer)
The
GAN review seems to be lacking as well, with a very light prose check, no discernible source spot check, and no copyright check, which I'm 99.8% sure is just an incorrectly-done review. Should I proceed with a reassessment request, or can this GAN be rescinded altogether?
joeyquism (
talk page)
01:12, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
That was a very recent GAN, closed 9 June 2024, it can be reopened if needed. First step is to raise it with the reviewer.
CMD (
talk)
01:18, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
I believe the lack of source and copyright checking and the amateurish prose are both grounds enough to go ahead and reopen the review. Of course I assume
WP:GOODFAITH from both parties, but it seems that this is a case of
WP:CIR. I've informed both the reviewer and nominator that the review has been reopened.
joeyquism (
talk page)
02:56, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
I think "amateurish" and "CIR" are a little harsh. It just looks like people who are working to learn best practices and could use some helpful advice—something that tends to be rarely given for up-and-coming editors.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
02:59, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
Fair enough - I didn't mean any offense by my use of these terms, just for the record. I've also extended a hand to both editors in case they are in need of any help during the GAN process.
joeyquism (
talk page)
03:07, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
Oftentimes when looking at song GANs, there are several nominations where all of the sourcing is about the album and none of the sources are specifically about the song. This raises some notability issues and goes against
WP:NSONG, but how should we handle this at GAN? There's of course the perennial dispute about whether non-notable articles should be passed through GA. But besides that, can these song articles pass criteria 2 and 3 if all of the sources are about the album? These are common enough that I feel some sort of consensus or precedent should be established.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
05:17, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
Hey all. A GA nominator whose article I was reviewing has just been temporarily banned for one month for sock-puppeteering. I haven't had to deal with a case of a nominator being blocked mid-review so I don't know what to do. Should I leave the review on hold, pending their return? Or should I just close the review as failed? (I still don't think it meets GA criteria as of now). --
Grnrchst (
talk)
10:52, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
It appears ChristieBot is getting partway through its run and then crashing before it can update the GAN page. I suspect I know what the problem is but I can't do anything about it till I get home this evening about eight hours from now, so GAN is not going to update until at least then.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
13:22, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Raising
this change for discussion here. Removing the repeated summary seems reasonable, but making the navigation more inaccessible is going to add further friction to the manual cleanups needed by making it harder to switch between lists. Wondering if there is a way to keep some sort of more compact navigation bar at the top.
CMD (
talk)
14:13, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
Pinging @
Prhartcom as the person who hid the summary (twice). My take is that this should be consistent across all of the different GA topic subpages, though I see this has been done on all of these pages. A compact navigation bar would be great as well, if that's possible. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
15:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for the ping and the feedback. Glad everyone likes it. Oh all right, I suppose now we do need a compact navigation bar to each of the 15 topic pages; I will start work on that. It will be very clear yet simple, similar to the page contents seen at the top of the
Wikipedia:Good articles/all page (that combines all the topic pages). Cheers,
Prhartcom (
talk)
03:06, 19 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm sorry to have to put this issue here, as I'm in principle against any quarrels with fellow editors, but I think my
GA nomination of Charles De Geer was not properly reviewed. Apart from a general point that
the article is not focused enough, which for reasons I tried to put forward I found was unfair or at least not obvious, I received very little constructive input on what to improve and how. (For the record, I would also like to underline here that while it may seem an unfocused article if treated as a bio of someone notable only for being a naturalist, I would tend to agree; however the subject of the article was notable for several different things, which should reasonably be reflected in the article.) Where I did receive such input, I either made the relevant changes or put forward my reasoning as to why I had written what I had written in the first place. Despite this, the nomination was closed as failed by the reviewer
Wolverine XI, without any real reply to my points in the review. I tried to raise the issue with the reviewer on their talk page but got a similarly short and negative reply. I therefore raise the issue here; I am of the opinion that my nomination was not given a proper review and my replies were not taken into consideration by the reviewer. I don't know what the procedure for this kind of complaint, and I'm sorry to have to raise the issue, but I really think this has not been a fair and constructive process. I'm very open to constructively improve the nominated article, or any other reasonable course of action, of course. Finally just a note to say that I may struggle in the coming days and weeks to respond quickly as I will be out sailing until early July.
Yakikaki (
talk)
09:43, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
It's a harsh review, and Wolverine XI's communication has been really quite poor, but I don't think it quite reaches "improper": the paragraphs on Lövstabruk do breach criterion 3b), in my opinion, by including too much unnecessary detail. Of course, if you don't feel the issues have merit, you can renominate immediately.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
12:52, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
Put it back into the queue when you're done sailing, and I'll be happy to give it a full review. I
have experience with highly detailed biographies of naturalists from Nordic countries.
Esculenta (
talk)
16:51, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
I have closed it. It looked like they had closed the discussion thinking that was all that was required. Let me know if it's the wrong category. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)22:16, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
I've split off Cue sports, and left Cricket as is for now in case there is more input. Let's see if it works smoothly. In the meantime, please divide it up into some subgroups. Best,
CMD (
talk)
14:04, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
I've changed my mind about hard caps on open nominations
In the past, I've objected to hard caps on how many nominations someone can have open at once. My reasoning was that it's unfair punishment to our most active content creators and that it only masks the problem. After running the numbers, I believe these arguments are outweighed by other factors.
As of the most recent
GAN report, there are 677 nominations under review or awaiting a reviewer. There are 58 nominators with at least three nominations, making up 340 noms in total. We make up almost exactly half of the backlog. If we emptied the "Nominators with multiple nominations" section by reducing everyone down to two noms, the backlog would instantly decrease by 224 nominations, bringing us down to 453. That's one third of the total backlog just made of those extra nominations. If we limit it to a more generous five noms, that's still 95 extra nominations beyond that limit.
To the argument that limiting noms only hides the full backlog, it's about how the noms are weighted. Right now, these "power users" make up half the backlog despite being a minority of the total nominators. This is unfair to the people who wait months longer in line just so we can double, triple, quadruple dip. To the argument that it makes it harder for efficient nominators to nominate, there's a way to make your nom a higher priority: review! Review the noms above yours in that category, or just review in general to lower the backlog. Even if new noms instantly take their place, those will have a more recent nom date. This way, there won't be one person who still has eight other nominations ahead of you after you review one of theirs. Or you could review for people who only have one nom and won't immediately replace it, which is often a new nominator who should get priority anyway. Alternatively, there's
Wikipedia:Good article review circles where you can get a reviewer much more quickly.
Once my current nominations are done, I'm going to voluntarily limit myself to no more than five at a time. But these limits only have significant effect if we adhere to them collectively, and I'm switching to a support !vote on such a measure. I'm also going to ping the few people who have more open noms than I do in case they'd be interested in a similar voluntary limitation:
Magentic Manifestations,
Chiswick Chap,
Aszx5000,
Gonzo fan2007,
Ippantekina,
Aintabli,
Epicgenius.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
02:22, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Frankly, I think this is not a very good idea. The "power users" are often our most experienced and dedicated contributors - so notably, they tend to have articles that are high quality to begin with and thus easier to review. Reviewing a newer editor's GAN is often far more difficult, because they aren't used to all the inns and outs yet - this takes an entirely separate skillset from reviewing an Epicgenius or Chiswick GAN (namely, that only an experienced reviewer would be as good at it!) I really don't looking at reducing the backlog as a numbers game is beneficial; what's important is getting articles reviewed in timely manner, which I don't think the "power users"' GAs are contributing to.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
02:46, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, generally an experienced editor's work is easier to review, given that the length and complexity of the article are the same. But by sheer volume, one experienced editor with lots of noms, myself included, is going to squeeze out those newer nominators who need the most attention. And like I said above, reviewing those nominations would be incentivized relative to an experienced nominator, as newer nominators wouldn't immediately have another nom ready to go. It's not a numbers game, it's about weight, and it would be fewer articles at a time being reviewed more quickly than a whole block of them being reviewed slowly.
And to approach from the other angle, I believe we should more readily (quick)fail nominations that aren't ready for GAN. It shouldn't just be "is it far from the criteria" but whether it fails the criteria in a way that puts an undue burden on a reviewer. These are ones that probably shouldn't have been nominated anyway, but they take up a disproportionate amount of reviewer time. When nominations aren't ready, we can direct editors to peer review, GOCE, the Teahouse, help pages, or wherever depending on where its weaknesses are. I'd say a limit on max noms plus holding nominators accountable for making sure nominations are ready is the best combo. We could get nominations in and out much more quickly that way while using GAN as a lightweight quality assurance/verification process instead of as Peer Review 2.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
03:44, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Unfortunately, the trend has been to increase GA standards rather than to accept that GAs aren't expected to be perfect (and that no article is, honestly). I doubt we'll secure any kind of consensus for returning GA to the lightweight process it was written as. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)04:29, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Given how little oversight there is, there's really nothing stopping individual reviewers from deciding how strict or lenient they want to be with the criteria, with failing, or with how they think the process should work.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
04:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Generally I'd agree, except that people who are "caught" doing reviews that others find inadequate are regularly dragged here and castigated. And when mistakes are caught in a GA that passed, reviewers catch flak for it.
On the other hand, people don't like being the "bad guy" and failing articles that aren't ready, so we give infinite time and chances for articles that frankly aren't up to snuff. Some noms will get upset that you failed their article, and nobody likes being on the other end of that conflict.
Basically, there's a competing social pressure to be incredibly thorough yet infinitely forgiving. Reviewers can't win, they get discouraged, and difficult articles sit around for ages. We need to change the culture around GA reviewing if we ever want to make a meaningful change in the backlog. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)04:54, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Honestly, I'd be willing to strike out everything I said above and go in the opposite direction. We could just as easily say it's a free for all on nominating but then be more firm with reviewing and quickfailing so weak noms don't bog us down. I'm actually more inclined toward that than a hard cap, except right now there's no consistency in reviews, and of course many nominators feel entitled to a pass. I personally am willing to be the one to say "this isn't ready for nomination" (and I have been trying to look for those nominations lately), but like you said, it needs to be part of a broader cultural change.
I'm going off on a slight tangent now, but I believe there are more sub-standard reviews that slip through the cracks than ones that get "caught". I watch many of them go by feeling like my hands are tied because there's also a stigma against accusing people of doing bad reviews, and it's gotten to the point where I just ignore them unless they start reviewing one of mine, in which case I ask them to return it.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
12:34, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I prefer to review the new nominators, starting with the ones who have done reviews, which usually means a higher failure rate and slower reviews for the passes because they are learning. I do this because I believe in encouraging a good review/nomination ratio, but another benefit is that it is an opportunity to teach those nominators how a good review should look.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
13:12, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I strongly disagree there is a stigma against accusing people of doing bad reviews. People do it on this talk page regularly, and the prospect of being publicly shamed creates a chilling effect for new reviewers.
I do want to point out the contradiction between suggesting that we use "GAN as a lightweight quality assurance/verification process" and saying reviewers should basically review how they want, but then bringing up "sub-standard reviews". We can't have speed and perfection. Either we accept that the process is supposed to be lightweight and allow reviews to be lightweight, or we keep tightening the screws and watch the backlog climb. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)14:12, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm probably part of the problem -- I can't really do "lightweight" reviews. I personally want peer reviews and suggestions to improve my articles much more than I care about another green plus, and so my reviews tend to be in depth and address more than the GA criteria. And nobody calls me out on this, even for monstrosities like
Talk:Chinese characters/GA1. I am not sure whether dedicated coordinators who look at every review for some quality assurance would help or harm, but this might be worth brainstorming about. —
Kusma (
talk)
09:49, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
I suspect coordination would start off at what we are de facto doing now in a haphazard and likely arbitrary manner, which is checking that reviews are 1) not checklists, 2) do source checks. I doubt it would crack down too much on being over-picky, especially as there is a lot of grey zone in the criteria.
CMD (
talk)
11:02, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
I think it's OK to point out issues that go beyond the GA criteria, so long as the nominator is clear that those comments don't need to be addressed to get the article to GA, and so long as there are not too many -- some nominators don't want to bring the article up to FA standards and shouldn't be asked to. But letting them know that a link is dead or MoS issues that are not in the GA criteria is fine, so long as they understand what's a GA comment and what is not.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:31, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Reducing the backlog by artificially throttling nominations does nothing to increase the rate of promotions of GAs. It is hiding the problem (we aren't getting enough GA reviews done and enough GAs promoted) by addressing the symptom of the problem rather than doing anything to improve the unwillingness of editors to do more reviews. We could decrease the backlog to zero by shutting down the whole GA process and cancelling all current nominations; do you think that would be an improvement? —
David Eppstein (
talk)
04:35, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
To the argument that limiting noms only hides the full backlog, it's about how the noms are weighted. Right now, these "power users" make up half the backlog despite being a minority of the total nominators. This is unfair to the people who wait months longer in line just so we can double, triple, quadruple dip. – Right there in the original post you're replying to.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
04:38, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
There is no line. Nobody requires review be done chronologically. Nobody will yell at your reviewer and you if your nomination attracts enough interest to get reviewed quickly. And we tried prioritizing frequent reviewers and new participants instead of listing nominations chronologically; it didn't help. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
04:55, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm inclined to agree with David Eppstein here. When we tried to push first-time nominators and frequent reviewers to the front of the line, it just increased the number of GANs that had been sitting in the queue for six months or longer.I think the issue here is that the review process is still fairly daunting. No one wants to be yelled at for looking at an article, determining that there are no (or very few) problems, and then quick-passing the article. Conversely, no one wants to be yelled at for looking at an article, seeing that it's riddled with problems, and then quick-failing the article. Quick-passing and quick-failing articles are both seen as problematic, even though there's nothing wrong with the latter. Therefore, many reviewers find themselves having to conduct intensive reviews, which means that fairly long articles are often skipped over by all except the most experienced reviewers. Many of these long articles come from power editors, which may be why it seems like the power editors are dominating the GAN queue. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
14:26, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm not going to suggest a return to the old sort order (though I did prefer it), but I think it's wrong to say that "all it did was increase the age of the oldest GANs". That's exactly what you would expect from reducing the importance of age in the GAN sort order. It doesn't mean the old sort order achieved anything else, but neither is it evidence that it didn't make a difference.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
14:30, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I meant to say that the change in sort order increased wait times for nominators near the bottom of the list. Currently, the newest nominations are near the bottom of each section, and the oldest nominations are near the top. Back when we were using the other sort order, we were grouping the nominations by username, so users near the bottom of the list saw their wait times increase. Granted, the other sort order did help decrease wait times for first-time nominators, but I think that came at the expense of everyone else, which is what I was getting at. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
14:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Wasn't that the point? If the sort order was causing those with better review ratios to have their wait times decreased (new submitters having a perfect ratio), then the system was achieving what it was meant to do.
CMD (
talk)
17:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Yeah, in that respect, it was working as intended (i.e. people with better review-to-nomination ratios didn't have to wait as long).I was trying to make the point that reviewers' limited time was diverted to people who have a lot of reviews and relatively few or no GAs. If someone was a prolific reviewer but an even more prolific nominator, they would be disadvantaged; e.g. if they had 100 reviews and 200 nominations, they were pushed further down the review queue than someone with 100 reviews and 10 nominations. Power users are more likely to have dozens or hundreds of GAs, so under the old sort order, they would be inherently disadvantaged because of the raw numbers of GAs that they had (unless they conducted even more reviews to make up for this). Perhaps it may be a good idea to consider formatting the GAN lists as sortable tables. That way, reviewers could decide on whether to review nominations by people with better review-to-nomination ratios. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
18:23, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Quickfails are not problematic in the slightest, as long as the reasoning is there. The difficulty is merely in the length of the average review. When people say "I'm not good at reviewing", what they actually mean is "I find reviewing tediously boring and don't want to do it", which is perfectly understandable.To prevent
WP:DCGAR happening again, we have decided that quality reviews must be directly enforced through the
GA criteria. Now, each review must go over the prose, images, sourcing, and do a source spotcheck. At FAC, this is handled by multiple people, and the source spotcheck is not needed after the first successful nomination. We have got ourselves into a situation where the "lightweight review process" is multiple times more onerous than the heavyweight process.Is there a better way? After DCGAR, I remember that
SandyGeorgia was encouraging the institution of GAN coordinators who would check reviews, as the FAC coordinators do. I think that option, in combination with lowering GACR standards, could help encourage reviewing—but only, of course, if editors with high nomination/review ratios want to pick up their own slack.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
15:05, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I agree, quickfails should not be problematic if done correctly. However, I noticed that nominators sometimes challenge GAN quickfails even if the reviewer has done everything correctly, e.g.
this thread from a few days ago. I was trying to make the point that some reviewers may be afraid to quickfail articles because they fear being confronted by the nominator; sorry if that isn't clear. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
15:32, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Indeed, and not even just quick fails, but any fail that takes less than a day or two. There are a couple of noms I've had on my mind for awhile that have been submitted with eg. unsourced sections, but the idea of pulling them out and failing them feels like more effort than it is worth.
CMD (
talk)
17:41, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Some thoughts generally agree with the above discussion that throttling noms doesn't solve the problem, that being stricter on reviews (i.e. quick failing) may push people to improve the quality more before nomming and that having a backlog in and of itself isn't necessarily a bad thing. My own reflections on the challenges of
WP:GAN come down to a lack of incentive for reviewing articles. When I started nomination articles at
WP:GAN, I told myself that I would keep a 2-to-1 ratio of reviews versus my own GAs. I did that mostly out of fear of being ostracized by the community for not reciprocating.
WP:DYK and
WP:FLC provide good examples of the extremes (where
WP:GAN is in the middle). DYK requires QPQ, increasing the QPQ requirements for frequent DYK users during backlogs.
WP:FLC on the other hand, limits you to one active nomination at a time (allowing for a second nom after your first has substantial support). I would argue that neither process is running very well, with backlogs or lack of reviews still being a challenge.
I think the most important thing to remember is that the purpose of recognition is to incentivize and encourage content creation. So long as
WP:GA encourages me and others to create fairly well-written articles, it's doing its job. To conclude on that point, I wouldn't support any changes that would limit the incentive for users (especially users who create a lot of good content) to keep writing. That little green icon will get up there at some point, it really doesn't matter when though. « Gonzo fan2007(talk) @ 15:07, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
After reading the replies, I can say that I'm back in the "I don't know" camp, but at least we got a discussion going! I'm sympathetic to PMC's point above, and others that have expressed similar thoughts, that it's more of a cultural issue than anything that can be directly solved by fiddling with how we organize nominations. But it just happens that most of the people close to GA's "culture" monitor and participate in this talk page, so this is where any concentrated change would happen. Personally I've been trying to be more open to failing nominations that weren't ready to be nominated.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
18:36, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Replying to myself so I can think aloud and express general thoughts. My takeaway here is that consensus is against limiting our own nominations as a means to reduce the backlog, and instead we should be more willing to fail nominations if they're not ready for a GAN review. Maybe we should be a little more firm with nominators who make a scene about reviewers who fail a nom, in the same way that we're being more firm with nominators who make a scene about inadequate reviews. I still don't love that the most active content writers have such a disproportionate number of nominations, but good points have been raised about other factors at play there. At the end of the day, like
SusunW said, there's really no way to incentivize reviewing for someone whose focus on Wikipedia isn't reviewing and trying to do this can be counterproductive. And like I've said before, GAN reviewing is harder than other reviews because all of the pressure is on the one reviewer, even if they're better at reviewing some aspects than others (looking at you, source reviews).
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
01:40, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
My answer to this problem has been the same for a while now: I don't review nominations of those who refuse to meaningfully contribute to reviewing (and have a decent number of GAs, I'm not punishing people doing their first ever nomination). But when I see someone with 50 GAs and 0 reviews, I cannot in good conscience ever take up one of their nominations. I work hard to keep my review/GA ratio close to 1, so I'm not expecting anyone to do something I wouldn't do myself. We need a cultural shift towards this mindset, in my opinion (and some will disagree with me, which is their right). We also have the age-old problem of how to incentivize reviewers, which many brighter than I have tried to solve. I think large numbers of open nominations are in part a symptom of these known issues, excluding the (thankfully rare) bad actor nominating crappy articles en masse (and I'm sure some of you know exactly who I am referring to). Bottom line - when I see people argue so strongly against any reform yet refuse to do any reviews themselves, I really have no sympathy for them. If you don't want to do reviews, fine, but don't expect others to prioritize your nominations.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
18:52, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
been watching this conversation quietly - completely agree with the above that this is a cultural problem that really needs a broader informal shift rather than acute reforms addressing only the symptoms. ...
sawyer * he/they *
talk01:08, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Comment – Every time these discussions come up I am less inclined to participate in the GA process, if I am being honest. I find the pressure to review more articles disheartening. Encouraging reviews is fine, reforming the processes is good too, but discouraging writing and limiting collaboration for improving articles is counter-productive. The entire point of GA, IMO, is improving article quality, but if all we are to do is focus on pushing reviews through, the processes begins to focus more on quantity, which to my mind is how we end up with so many poorly written articles to begin with. We are a very diverse community of volunteers. Not everyone's skill-sets are the same and assuming that we can all do the same tasks equally well fails to recognize our diversity. The constant chastisement of people who don't review more doesn't encourage people to participate, but in fact does the opposite, at least for me. (For the record, I have nominated only 1 GA all year (at the request of the reviewer). Although I have written articles that would benefit from collaboration, I have not nominated them, but forced myself instead to review other's work. I spent over a month helping an editor at peer review prepare their first FA nomination, reviewed 5 FA/GA nominations. Not big numbers to some people's standards, but that required a huge amount of effort for me, as my reviews are meticulous, and I am incapable of making them less so. I see no value in holding anyone to my standards, but rather think that all contributions which lead to a better encyclopedia are valuable.)
SusunW (
talk)
20:59, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Generally I think we should try to be more positive about all contributors here. Perhaps we should celebrate reviewers more (COI alert: I tend to review more than I write) instead of looking down at non-reviewers (although it is a very human thing to do). I like reviewing
SusunW's biographies (and I really enjoy working with her) so I am sad there have been so few of them here recently.
I am very interested in seeing whether the
review circles idea can work as a (completely voluntary) way where people who are OK with doing some reviewing get their own nomination reviewed faster. If this becomes popular, people will have a choice: do a review to get your own nom reviewed very soon/put your nom on the pile with no questions asked about reviewing (and that means you may have to wait until the next backlog drive). —
Kusma (
talk)
09:32, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Thank you
Kusma I enjoy working with you too a lot. I am going to rip a bandaid off here and be vulnerable for a minute, but maybe it will help some people understand that reviewing is not simple for everyone. When I review I file, I tell myself, this time I am just going to read it, make comments, do a spot check and move on. But that never happens, ever. I read through the article. I start a 2nd read through and when I get to the first citation, I check it. I tell myself at the second citation to just accept it, but my brain says, what if it doesn't verify the information or has a copyvio? You have to sign-off that it's okay, so I check it. And this continues through every single citation. If I find an inconsistency, instead of just asking the question do you have a source that supports this?, I must know if there is a source. Or, I encounter something that the context is unclear. If a source is off-line do I AGF? Totally depends on whether other checks have had no problems. So I research (sometimes for hours) to find a reference that supports the data, provides context, or is accessible. Only if I cannot find a source do I just ask the question.
By this time, an entire day has passed and I am probably only 1/3 to 1/2 way through the article, so I post what I have from my notes to WP. I rewrite each query to make sure that what I am asking is clear and a suggestion, not a demand. I preview it and rewrite it again before I finally save it and move on. Day 2 and Day 3 are more of the same until I finally reach the end of the article, drained and exhausted. I hope that the nominator will take at least a day to respond to give me time to regroup. I review the responses as meticulously as I did the queries and finally make a decision on the outcome. Instead of feeling successful, my feeling is relief that it's over. And then I see a post on this page, admonishing people about not doing enough reviews and I force myself to do it again. The struggle is real, and it is hard. Howie Mandel once said I know my approach is not logical, but in spite of that I am compelled to do the illogical. That's me. We cannot assume we know why people don't do reviews, but we can change our approach to one which encourages people to do what they can. (And yes, I rewrote this 5 times.)
SusunW (
talk)
16:04, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for taking the time to write this out Susun. The work you have done over the years to improve articles on here has been amazing and very inspiring, it has always been a pleasure to read what you have written and to work with you not only on reviews but other projects too. It's heartbreaking to hear you have been so discouraged by these periodic discussions on reviews, and I apologise profusely if I have contributed to that discouragement. Discouraging others from doing such good work should never be what we aim to accomplish here, and it is not a good sign if we are going in that direction. I agree completely that we need to reevaluate how to encourage more reviews without discouraging nominations, and to be more holistically positive towards each other. --
Grnrchst (
talk)
19:40, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Grnrchst we're all good. I honestly just wanted to offer a different perspective to remind everyone that we don't all have the same access and abilities. The internet has been a great bridge but its anonymous nature can also make us forget that there is a real human on the other side. I don't often speak of my struggles, but perhaps it can help us be more "holistically positive towards each other".
AirshipJungleman29 I am uncertain what you are saying, I do and have done GA reviews.
SusunW (
talk)
20:26, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
My two centimes: Since my foray into good article nominations, I have tried to maintain at least 2 reviews for each nomination. Not only do I enjoy reviewing articles, because it gives me a way to read in-depth on subjects that I normally wouldn't have spent more time on, but I also try to be a net contributor to cutting down the backlog. My frustrations with the ever-growing backlog has, at least in part, come from a selfishness on my part.
Off the top of my head, there are at least a couple dozen or so articles that I have written to (I think) a GA standard, but which I haven't nominated due to the length of time it takes for nominations to get reviewed. Often I'll end up finishing an article, having polished off its prose and gone through every source I have in a number of languages, but then I just don't end up nominating it because I already had a number of months-old pending nominations that I was anxious to get reviewed. I think the only time I have exceeded five open nominations is during the ongoing WiG edit-a-thon.
I seriously regret that I have let my frustration at this process bubble over into support for certain restrictions, so I can't rightly support TBUA's proposal, despite understanding where he's coming from. The reason I want the backlog to be reduced is so that we can get more articles nominated, not restrict incoming nominations and punish some of our best writers. I would like applaud GMH Melbourne's recent review circles initiative, which I think could be an excellent way forward with encouraging more reviews. Let's consider making more positive projects like this, rather than imposing negative restrictions. --
Grnrchst (
talk)
20:12, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
I have only seen the ping for me by the op of this thread. I am new to GA, so if I have made too many nominations, I can certainly take some off, and don't want to be disruptive. Given my nominations are in the niche area of climbing, I felt that I needed to give a range of noms to attract/tempt some interest from reviewers. Two of them have been given GA status (and a third is almost there), but I never considered that I would be able to do the reviewing, is that something that I am meant to be considering at this stage? thanks.
Aszx5000 (
talk)
21:50, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
Aszx5000, reviewing is entirely up to you, and I was just trying to open another discussion on how to get articles reviewed more quickly. Based on the discussion above, it seems that we're largely okay with lots of nominations at once (and personally I'm glad to see more niches showing up). If you're interested in reviewing other people's nominations but not sure where to start, you can make a post at the
mentorship page so someone can help you with your first review.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
22:07, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
Thanks @
Thebiguglyalien. I though I would have to have more GAs under my belt before doing reviews. Let me get through a few more as I am still learning new things, but would love to give it a try later, and will follow your steps. thanks.
Aszx5000 (
talk)
10:32, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
It looks like an article (with some incorporated list-like material) to me, without any obvious flaws of a type that would lead me to quickfail it. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
17:28, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, it's happening! I'd apologize for the short notice, but a July backlog drive has been on the backlog page since April, so instead I'll apologize for disappearing for most of May-June and not getting to this earlier.
The aim this time around is to encourage participation by people who haven't done many GA reviews before. Experienced reviewers are encouraged to assist newbie reviewers with their reviews - but if you want to ignore the theme and just bang out a bunch of GA reviews as usual, go right ahead. This format is obviously somewhat experimental, so if anyone has suggestions, please do suggest away. And if anyone else would like to volunteer as co-ordinator, so far it's just me by my lonesome and I'd love to have you. --
asilvering (
talk)
05:42, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie, is it possible to get a list of all editors who have reviewed 1-4 GANs? A list of editors who have GAs but have never reviewed would also be really helpful. I have no idea how to generate either of these. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:25, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, for the first one, that's fine. Though if there's some way to restrict the list to only active accounts, that would be even more useful. For the second, yes, a restriction like that would be useful, though I'm not sure exactly where I'd draw the line. The last two years maybe? Or if there's a way to only get active accounts, that would be useful too. Define "active" however seems workable. My aim is to come up with a list of people who might be interested in participating in the backlog drive as a newbie reviewer. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:38, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Asilvering: I've never been a co-ordinator of a GAN backlog before, but I have participated in previous ones, so I'm interested. What and where could I help?
Vacant0 (
talk)
15:12, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Glad to have you! I'll add your name to the backlog drive page. While I'm at it, pinging @
Ganesha811 and @
Vaticidalprophet, who were also co-ords of the last one - are you folks interested?
The main part of the job is checking off reviews as editors post them as finished on the drive page - checking to make sure the reviews aren't seriously inadequate, and double-checking what additional points for length might be given, or if you think the review is so good you ought to give it a discretionary bonus point. Since this drive is specifically encouraging collaboration between newbie reviewers and more experienced reviewers, this will be a little (but only a little, I hope) more complicated than usual, since you'll also have to award a point to the assistant reviewer. I anticipate also that there will be more questions than usual and that we may need to assist with matching newbie reviewers with experienced ones.
Also, if you'd like to revise the barnstar awards list, that would be great! I just copied the one from the March backlog drive. But I think it would be nice to tailor it a bit - for example, we could have a barnstar for the editor who assisted with the highest number of reviews, some kind of special "thanks for joining" barnstar for newbies (I think there's a "promising newbie" barnstar somewhere?), or so on. I haven't put any further thought into it than that, so if you want to go ahead and rework the list, it's much appreciated, and all yours! --
asilvering (
talk)
18:33, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Considering that assistant reviewers will get one point per review, I could create a couple of barnstars (e.g. a 5 point one, a 10/12 point one, and the one that reviewed the highest amount of GANs). Or we could only stick with one barnstar for assistant reviewers.
The only barnstar that I could have found similar to "promising newbie" is {{The New Editor's Barnstar}}.
Hm too bad re: promising newbie. Since I imagine most GAN newbies will not actually be new editors. Whatever you find that you like, go for it.
This drive deliberately doesn't have points for reviewing really old articles, to keep the focus on bringing new people into GA reviewing. Earlier, when we discussed having multiple backlog drives as part of the broader discussions about what to do with the backlog, there were concerns about reviewer burn-out or reviewers holding off on doing reviews when there aren't backlog drives (since another one will be around the corner). So the idea is that the January drive is the "main" drive, the mid-year one is focused on recruitment, and the fall one addresses a specific portion of the backlog, to be determined closer to the date, depending on what looks like it needs the most help. --
asilvering (
talk)
19:46, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Before uploading anything, I'll send it first on Discord in case of possible corrections . I'll be busy tomorrow so expect barnstars to come during the weekend. Cheers,
Vacant0(
talk •
contribs)13:51, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm happy to assist as a co-ordinator, but I do have some work travel in July which means I'd have to take on more of a background role - checking a few reviews where I can, not making any big decisions. If that's ok, feel free to add my name! —
Ganesha811 (
talk)
21:20, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Ganesha811, thanks for asking. I'm going to be away the first week; though I might be able to log on at night, it won't be as timely as usual. Another difficulty is that I would be required to make the second column the number of old nominations (90 days or more) rather than the number of unreviewed nominations (which we have always done before), per the general RfC that was held earlier in the year, so rather than just taking the number from the Reports page and adjusting back the hour), I'd have to do a more manual calculation. I'm not sure I'll have the time to deal with the extra work involved.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
00:10, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Hm, good point. And since we aren't targetting old noms specifically this time around, maybe we should rethink the progress list, at least for this drive. A running total of reviews opened/ended might be the way to go this time. I'm happy to do that one, since I tend to be around when a new day starts on UTC time. --
asilvering (
talk)
00:23, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
asilvering, I'm not sure how that would work with the current {{GAN changes}} template in terms of display. You may need to create your own table. But I would keep the total number of nominations as the first column, since that tracks how many are outstanding at the beginning of the drive, and all the way through to the end. Good luck! I'll sit this one out, then, unless you change your mind on how you want it to work.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
00:33, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Is a reviewer allowed to contribute to an article during the review?
While looking at a certain GAN nominee that needs a review (I have not decided yet whether to review it or not), I noticed that some of the statements in the article had dubious sourcing. I was able to find some sources that I felt were more reliable + had valuable information. I also noticed some translation errors; as the original language is a language I speak, I would be able to correct these translations. Would I as a reviewer be allowed to recommend these sources to the nominator + offer translation corrections? I understand that reviewers are not allowed to significantly contribute to the article before review.
Jaguarnik (
talk)
19:22, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Jaguarnik, recommending sources is absolutely fine. It is always great when a GA reviewer's suggestions make an article substantially better. A problem only arises when you end up contributing so much to an article that you would have to review your own work; in such cases, best to ask for a second opinion. —
Kusma (
talk)
19:31, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
(ec)You can certainly make suggestions to the nominator, and to be honest for minor corrections (punctuation and typos for example) I would recommend making the changes yourself, since it takes longer to type out "you have mispelt 'supersede'" than it does to correct it. However, do be sure you're right when you make such changes. I have frequently made more extensive copy edits than that when I am confident that the nominator won't mind -- e.g. when the author clearly has English as their second language, but the article is well-researched and close to GA standard, I'll do some clean up editing. This is more of a judgement call. For the translation corrections you're suggesting, you might ask the nominator if they would mind if you just did the fixes yourself, in case they disagree with your translation. Few nominators will object. One circumstance in which I will not make changes myself is if the point at issue is something I suspect the nominator is unfamiliar with -- I'd rather they made the fix so they understand the issue. None of the above is required, and many reviewers won't change a single comma on the article they're reviewing, and that's fine too -- it's your call.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
19:37, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Grouping these here, if no further comments or consensus is reached I plan to implement these at the end of the month, before the backlog drive starts.
CMD (
talk)
01:02, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Video games
Wikipedia:Good articles/Video games is one of two long lv2 categories with no lv3 split (the other is
Lang & Lit), and one that feels it has a very obvious split: between the Video Games (and series) themselves, and everything else (provisionally I propose "Context and content"). Regarding the lower splits, the video games are currently divided into five-year blocks, some of which are getting very large. There's no clean split there, but if there is a desire to maintain the chronological split it could transition into two-year chunks for at least the 21st century, imitating
Music. The other large sections is "Video game characters", currently at 200. This seems a simple candidate from pulling out series, with the two obvious candidates being Pokémon (26) and Final Fantasy (at least 34, I think, it's a complicated series). 13:45, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
CMD (
talk)
13:45, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
Maybe break out some entire series into their own subcat? Eg you could put all Final Fantasy, Mario, Pokemon, etc grouped together (both games and game-adjacent articles). That seems more helpful to me than these huge by-half-decade chunks. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:23, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Well that would invalidate my lv3 split, but I'm not in opposition. I have pulled out just the characters for now, which can be a start for pulling relevant articles out from the other subsections too. Pokémon is easy enough, the games all include the word Pokémon, Final Fantasy has a list at
Wikipedia:WikiProject Square Enix.
CMD (
talk)
14:31, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
I would go the other way on this - games should be listed strictly chronologically. Having some sorted by series, and some sorted by chronology, seems strange and "surprising" (in the bad sense) to me.
SnowFire (
talk)
17:37, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Do you have a better idea for how to separate them? The issue at hand here is that when the categories get super long, they should be subdivided. But the chronology sections are already divided in 5-year blocks. We could make the categories shorter by shortening that to 2-year blocks, I suppose, but I don't think that's likely to be helpful to anyone. --
asilvering (
talk)
02:53, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
An alternate lvl3 split could be "by date" and "by series", in that case. I do agree that your originally proposed lvl3 split is better than no lvl3 split at all. --
asilvering (
talk)
02:54, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Rail transport - time for some splitting?
In
Wikipedia:Good articles/Engineering and technology#Transport, we have 208 articles classified under "rail transport" and a whopping 243 articles under "Rail bridges, tunnels, and stations: United States". I think we should discuss breaking these into subcategories. Some ideas I have for breaking down the general rail transport category are "rail lines", "rail accidents and incidents", "rail companies", and "rapid transit/tram systems". Rail bridges, tunnels, and stations: United States could be divided into rapid transit stations and heavy rail stations, while we could add a "bridges, tunnels, and facilities" section to hold pretty much everything else, including freight facilities (I think the only one is
Northup Avenue Yard, my nomination).
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
22:48, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
Note the general rail transport category is basically an "others" group for all rail-related pages that don't fall within a subcategory. The proposed subcats make sense in the abstract, at a glance I can see a lot of incidents. Unsure if I'd cleanly split rail lines and rail systems, something encompassing systems and lines like it could pick up related articles like
Northern line extension to Battersea too? Can't at a glance figure out how many company article there are. Splitting stations from bridges, tunnels, and facilities also sounds sensible, to the point it raises the question of whether to split them entirely rather than just in the United States, but that doesn't mean the smaller action won't work.
CMD (
talk)
01:13, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
My thinking was I'd throw out some ideas and we as a community evaluate which make sense. A separate rail accidents and incidents section seems like a no-brainer to me, as does one for bridges, tunnels, and facilities. A lot of the U.S. articles on railroads cover both a company and the line(s) it operated in a single article, making them hard to split between lines vs. companies. We can always make more changes in the future.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
14:11, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
I've split the facilities etc. from the United States, a heavy/rapid station split will require more time and/or a subject matter expert. I looked at accidents and incidents quickly and only found 9 so left those alone for now. If splitting lines/companies/systems becomes a bit complex, perhaps splitting off just the United States here as well would be helpful.
CMD (
talk)
10:30, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Biology and medicine reviews
I was looking over the GAN's in the Biology and medicine category and noticed that 11 of these were started by
Wolverine XI, all within the span of five days (June 10th through 15th). I thought to bring this up here because I'm concerned that the quality of these reviews will suffer from the quantity that this user has taken on, which I think is more than evident in the fact that 8 of them haven't even been started yet. Some of these reviews have received no comments for two whole weeks since their inception.
While I commend their ambition, I don't think this practise is conducive to the standard of quality that the Good Article system should uphold. Perhaps something can be done about it?
The Morrison Man (
talk)
13:54, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm busy with another project (at the moment). I should have all these articles reviewed by Saturday. After that, I'm retiring from reviewing GANs. Reviews can take some time, so people should be patient.
WolverineXI(
talk to me)14:10, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
If you haven't really gotten started on some of those, you may want to CSD them so that another reviewer can pick them up. You don't need to rush yourself to get through them all this week. You can call this a learning experience and toss some back into the queue. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:43, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
It is Saturday (at least where I am): I can see that
Wolverine XI has managed to make comments on two of the open reviews, but the remainder appear to be blank. Wolverine XI, I would echo the concerns here that you may have taken on too much here: the reviews you have done (see e.g.
Talk:Enchylium polycarpon/GA2) are really a short list of isolated prose and content points rather than full reviews. In particular, we need some evidence of source checking, image review, copyvio checks and so on. In other places, the comments are so brief as to be of little help: writing "please write a proper measurement" against that are 5–7 x 1-1.5 μm doesn't really tell the nominator what is wrong or how to fix it. Similarly, I don't think the review on
Talk:Charles De Geer/GA1 really gave the nominator a fair go: the article looks very close to GA standard to me and I would have thought it an excellent candidate to get up to that status in the course of the review.
As the other commenters here have said, reviewing is a learning process and we always have to go through practice to get good at it, but it would be polite to delete those review pages so that others can take them on, or return to them once you have finished your active reviews more fully, if they are still un-taken. UndercoverClassicistT·
C16:13, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Since Wolverine XI seems not to understand the issue and is still editing without addressing the concerns here, I suggest the blank reviews be deleted. We may also wish to go over their completed reviews, as the ones they've worked on indicate that they don't totally understand how the review process works.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
02:26, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Request Help with Abrupt GA Delist at Florida State University (Main article)
We are 3 days within the 7 days to contest an abrupt GA delist, so I am requesting additional editors and assistance today to resolve this delist while I simultaneously try to persuade the delisting editor to reverse their action. Another editor and I were in the middle of an appropriate GAR of the Florida State University main article. The cooperating editor and I were waiting for a subject matter expert to weigh into non-free materials assessment. All other matters were style and minor. A third editor enters and without establishing collaboration or consenus and abrupting delists the article, which has had GA status for years. Kindly help me resolve this matter.
Sirberus (
talk)
17:32, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
The GAR was closed after two weeks of no activity on the reassessment page, and a week of no edits to the article, with copyright issues still unresolved. Closing the reassessment as delist in this situation does not seem problematic to me. That said, the reassessment has now been reopened – is there anything else that needs to be done here?
Caeciliusinhorto (
talk)
18:25, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
There are some long-outstanding review pages that don't have any real activity on them at all. Normally, another editor will come in and check up on them, and eventually they get CSD'd when there's no response from the reviewer.
Here is one where
Thebiguglyalien just came through to do just that. But in the interests of not dragging out this procedure unnecessarily, could we perhaps institute a general guideline for when we should simply nominate these for CSD without further discussion? How about one month? To be clear, I'm talking only about reviews that have not been started at all, beyond the usual "I'll take this review" opening comment. --
asilvering (
talk)
00:47, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I took a page from
BlueMoonset's book (as it's mostly just them doing it) and nudged some of the inactive reviews, but I didn't give more specific instructions specifically because we don't have an agreed upon procedure like this. Anything like this should also apply where the reviewer has set up a template or headings but didn't fill them in with a review. For the ones where there was activity, we might also consider talking about second opinions, because right now the second opinion system is kind of useless.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
01:01, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I didn't mean to imply you'd done anything out of the ordinary, I just grabbed that one as a good example of what I mean by a blank review. I'm just suggesting that we make a guideline to cut down on this extra "are you still here" "[silence]" "nominator, what do you want to do?" in the process. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:13, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I think having a general procedure to point to is a great idea. I'd suggest a week. If you open a review but make no comment in a week, the review can be closed and the nomination returned to the queue. No penalty or particular shame, it's just a politeness to the nominator, so that the nomination has the chance to be picked up by a reviewer who has the time to dedicate to the review at the moment.
Ajpolino (
talk)
01:15, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
My initial thought was that a week was much too short, but on reflection, automatically clearing out reviews that are still blank a week after they were opened would probably cut down on the number of reviews that get stretched out over several months. ==
asilvering (
talk)
01:19, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm hesitant to recommend deleting without nudging, and also feel a week after opening is a bit short. Reviews can take time, and that time might only be possible on weekends or similar. That said, a week after nudging seems pretty harmless. If there is a consensus that nudging is not required, I would recommend multiple weeks, maybe 3-4, for CSD. There should be no prejudice of course to the same reviewer restarting the review page if they come back to it.
CMD (
talk)
01:18, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I suppose I could be convinced so long as the response can just be a brief "I am working on this", although it still feels a short timeframe for a nudge. As a general thought, the same principles being discussed here should not only apply to empty reviews but to partial ones, just with a different resulting process (CSD for empty, archiving and resetting for partial except in the few circumstances 2O may be useful).
CMD (
talk)
01:23, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Hm, I deliberately restricted this thought to blank reviews only, since I think partial reviews should be handled on a more case-by-case basis. There are lots of reasons why a review might have stalled out. Reviews that are simply blank, however, are all basically the same "case". --
asilvering (
talk)
01:27, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Fair enough, I was thinking of past nudging of months-old reviews, but appreciate the value of maintaining a narrow proposal here.
CMD (
talk)
01:30, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I like the idea of applying this to stalled reviews of any stripe (of course, as CMD said, we would archive rather than delete stalled partial reviews). The reviewer could always start the review again at any time. No one is being penalized. Asilvering's suggestion of one week til nudge, another week til close, sounds good to me. If the reviewer responds in any way that would reset the clock. The idea is just to return nominations to the queue if the reviewer truly doesn't have time to complete the review.
Ajpolino (
talk)
12:59, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Is there anything the bot could do that would help? E.g. a "stalled review" section at the end of the GAN page, listing open reviews with no edits for more than N days?
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
13:09, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, that would be excellent. In a perfect world, I assume we would want a blank review that gets removed (possibly even an incomplete "stalled review"?) to also be removed from the bot's count of an editor's GA reviews. Not a huge deal either way, of course.
Ajpolino (
talk)
21:07, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
If a review is deleted and another review is later done with the same page number, the prior review is no longer included in an editor's GA review count, though if the later review never happens the earlier one won't get removed from the stats. If the review is just marked as failed and the page number is incremented, the reviewer does get credit.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
21:17, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, no edits for more than n days would be helpful. If it could check "no edits to article OR to GA review page" that would probably be the most helpful way to list them. N = 7? No one's suggested a time shorter than 7 days for any of the hypotheticals we've been discussing. --
asilvering (
talk)
06:03, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Thinking about this some more, I'd like to get agreement on exactly what we'd want to see in a section called "Stalled reviews". Suppose the reviewer opens the review by posting a full review with their first edit -- that's not a stalled review, so is there a way to avoid including those? Some reviewers post an empty reviewing template as their first review; if they never edit it again that counts as stalled, but how could the bot tell those apart?
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
17:27, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, but I think an automatic list is only going to be helpful if the entries mean that someone needs to look at the review. If the review were to be deleted, it would disappear from the list, but if the list includes reviews that aren't blank and aren't going to be deleted then it won't be possible to tell if someone has already taken action. I could remove anything from the list if someone else posts to that page -- i.e. someone not the nominator or reviewer. Would that work?
CMD, any thoughts? Since you were dubious below about the process to deal with non-blank stalled reviews.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
15:31, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
My first idea for the bot would be to place a talkpage reminders for reviews which were opened but have had no edits since. This would miss say a review where someone writes "Will get to this soon" and doesn't, but on the other hand it would have no false positives. I would not put a section on the GAN page itself, that feels a very public sort of reprimand. We already have
Wikipedia:Good article nominations/Report, which gives an indicator of what is stalled even if it doesn't state the time of last edit.
CMD (
talk)
16:02, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Oh, I don't think we should have automated talk page reminders for this! I thought we were talking about a line on the Report page you mention here. Reading back up, I see I misunderstood Mike Christie's initial comment, where he said "at the end of the GAN page". I don't think that's a good idea either - I was thinking about the Report page. --
asilvering (
talk)
17:57, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Actually I did mean on the main GAN page, in a section at the end, but if it would be perceived as a reprimand I agree that might be a bad idea. The way the FAC nominations viewer does it is to have "Inactive for N days/weeks" after each entry. Something like that might be possible; it doesn't single anyone out. That would not be easy to convert into "I need to go look at this particular review", though.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
18:29, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
I do think it could be perceived as a reprimand. The Report page, less so, I think, since barely anyone uses it. I've gone through the longest-running open reviews before both this backlog drive and the last one, and found in most of the cases that no other uninvolved editor had popped in to check on the reviews. For that reason, I don't think it would lead to significantly more people being hassled if there was a "no edits for n days" listing on the report page. I do think that having that list on the report page would allow stalled reviews to be noticed much earlier than they are now, which seems to be a timeframe of at least a couple of months. --
asilvering (
talk)
18:36, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Sure. No need to CSD incomplete "stalled" reviews. They can just be closed and the nom returned to the queue. The same could be said of blank reviews of course. I don't have a strong preference on CSD vs. close-and-ignore for truly blank review pages.
Ajpolino (
talk)
21:04, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I'm not talking about this kind of review. That's a complete review. It's a poor one, but it's complete, not blank. --
asilvering (
talk)
02:45, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
The current
Talk:Blackpink/GA1 was not the one that was the subject of a MfD, the MfD was about the previous version which was essentially blank. That said, it was an MfD complicated by a new user engaging in procedurally questionable actions rather that added to the page history, so that particular case is an outlier. (The current
Talk:Blackpink/GA1, being as you note poor but not empty, was invalidated and the counter incremented.)
CMD (
talk)
15:00, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Ah, I see. I suppose my confusion here is an argument in favour of not CSDing these pages... but I do strongly agree with you and jpxg in that discussion. --
asilvering (
talk)
18:18, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Reviewing new nominators
We've had multiple discussions about whether nominations from editors with no GAs deserve to be reviewed earlier than other nominations, but I'd like to make a different case: reviewing nominations from these editors as soon as possible is beneficial for GAN.
I've done a lot of first-time-nominator reviewing, and my observations would include:
They are more likely to fail
They are more likely to be ill-prepared
The nominators are usually (but not always) enthusiastic about the process and keen to fix any issues
They also, more often than not, are clearly delighted by success in a way that those of us jaded by ten or more GAs have probably forgotten.
The two most important observations, though, are:
The first review is a great way to show them how a review should be done -- detailed spotchecks, verification of sources, no complaining about aspects of the MoS that aren't part of GACR, and -- a key point -- how communication works between the nominator and the reviewer.
The first promotion is the perfect time to encourage them to review. They've seen how reviews work, and they're successful so their skill is validated. If they've already done a review, I sometimes post a note on their talk page after promotion telling them that that's why I picked their GA to review, and saying we always need reviewers.
I think first-time nominators are the pool from which we should be hoping to draw the innumerable reviewers we need to keep GAN going. If you review first-time nominators, you will see more than your share of editors who (currently) lack the skills to put a GA-quality article together, but you'll also be helping to attract new reviewers, more effectively than any other method I can think of.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
22:17, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
User:CanonNi, I didn't know you had to get this checked. I looked over the review and it seems like you addressed all the salient points, and it looks like you took it seriously. I glanced over the article, and the parts I looked at had no obvious prose problems, they had secondary citations, etc. So at least at a cursory glance I don't see any trouble. Thanks,
Drmies (
talk)
12:36, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Drmies, for the purposes of the backlog drive, we're making sure that every newbie reviewer has some degree of oversight from a more experienced reviewer. If you'd like to help out with that part, I'd encourage you to sign up for the backlog drive! --
asilvering (
talk)
17:59, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
asilvering, haha, I thought it said "backlog drivel". I appreciate it but I'm way too random for that--although I did run into a GA problem here; see the section above. Thanks,
Drmies (
talk)
18:59, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
It is worth noting that these reviews are ineligible under the contest, which has specific recommendations for review length. I have dropped a note to the coordinators about making it more explicit.
CMD (
talk)
12:37, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
Talk:Giado concentration camp/GA1 doesn't hint to me that the so-called reviewer checked that any of the citations are of texts that actually say what they're presented as saying. Come to think of it, I don't see any evidence that the reviewer even read the article, let alone read a sample of what it appears to be based on. If I were the nominator, I'd take this "review" as an insult. --
Hoary (
talk)
12:48, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
I was very surprised at the speed and commentlessness of my two GA passes—I assumed it was an experienced editor, but the blockquote thing should have tipped me off. Let’s be light on this editor, whose profile indicates he is gen alpha, so around 14 years old at most. It’s easy to misunderstand how involved a GAR is supposed to be, for those who aren’t familiar. ꧁Zanahary꧂20:03, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
Age discrimination is not a helpful rectifying action here. We are meant to be non-bitey to all editors.
CMD (
talk)
01:18, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
I'm all for sweetness to every soul. Just, a 38 year-old might take his mess-up being discussed in a certain way very differently from a 14 year-old. ꧁Zanahary꧂02:22, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
Shouldn't it be a Featured list? I think it's still good shape-wise; I don't keep up with this show, so I don't know if it's up-to-date.
Spinixster(trout me!)10:14, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
The article seems to have been named "Characters of Smallville" when it was originally a GAN, which was fine then, but it later got moved in a RM to the current title. It should likely be either removed as a GA (as an ineligible list) or assessed for FL status.
Flemmish Nietzsche (
talk)
10:22, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
Off-topic, but boy does that Mando list badly need a revamp. The minor characters section is almost entirely unsourced. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)08:07, 4 July 2024 (UTC)
Concerns about a review: Taj Mahal
Hi! I want to bring to notice that the review done for
Taj Mahal seems to be done by a reviewer in a haste with the review not done as per all the GA criteria.
Background: The article was a GA for many years (2006-2021) and it was de-listed. The article has gone through multiple reviews (eight GA/FA/peer reviews/reassessments to be precise), with three previous assessments retaining it as a GA. The concerns raised in the previous review where it was de-listed (gallery, citation tags, expansion of certain sections), have been fairly addressed. The article is fairly expansive, was a GA and has gone through improvements to address the issues.
In the current review, the reviewer seems to have taken up a few random citations and has found contentious reasons (e.g. "It is not available in Google Books", "it is rather vague", "Author's meaning is different") for discrediting them, quickly failing the GA on the same. Ironically, some of these sources discredited are reliable, verifiable, and have been there for years through all these reviews.
As an editor, I would have been happy to provide clarifications if this was discussed and would work on improving the article if constructive comments have been provided. As comments provided previously have been addressed adequately, the current review adds little value as to what needs to be done. Would request clarity on the below points:
Book citations have been rejected simply because it is not accessible on Google Books or it requires paid access. As per
WP:CITEHOW and
WP:RS, onus is on providing the required details and not that the book should be available for free or in Google books, I presume. This is of concern as majority sources quoted here are journal sources with paid access and books. There has been no concern raised on this over the years through multiple assessments as well. I request for clarity on verifiability of books not accessible through Google Books and paid journals with respect to the GA.
While there are quick criteria for the failure of GA, in my opinion, the review has not done justice to the article and certainly is not a case for quick failure. Would request further comments or second opinion on this as to how to proceed. Thanks!
As co nominator, I agree with MM. The review seemed to have been done hastily for a former GA and former FAC. Also, it would be better for an experienced GA reviewer to take up an article like Taj. It is definitely not in a quick fail criteria and can always be improved upon. Thanks. —
The Herald (Benison) (
talk)
07:03, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
I gave a full reply on the review, but to me this is overstating the prominence of "inability to access sources" in the review, and it doesn't mention some fundamental issues with OR and failed verification.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
07:10, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Thebiguglyalien To me, your revert seem to be only justifying what has been done and does nothing to address any of the concerns. Please let me be clear here. The intention is to productively work on the comments/issues, so that it can be addressed and I do not want to simply waste our times in engaging in a fruitless dispute just for the sake of it with no real clarity at the end as to what to do. Whether it is a GA fail or a pass, a GA review should be fair enough to do justice to the editor(s), who put in effort and nominate the article. I will state in certain terms that this review at best throws some clarity requirements for a few statements and does not provide much to help in improving the article further.
Your comments also conveniently fail to sufficiently address any of the questions or clarifications raised here. So it would be helpful if these are addressed point by point. I am repeating this, as this was the whole pointing of raising this here as this would again help in getting clarity on these issues, so that they can be worked upon.
1. It has not addressed the basic question of why book/journal sources were simply considered not verifiable because somebody was not able to access it. Shouldn't a clarification be sought from the editor in the first place? Are book sources not available in Google Books prohibited as per
WP:RS? Does the GA criteria say that if the source is not available in Google Books or requires a subscription, it has to be considered unverifiable and quick failed?
2. There was no comprehensive review on all the criteria. The page has gone through iterations and if it is quick failed with few suspect comments (which in my opinion is nowhere close to the criteria for quick fail), another reviewer might do the same for another paragraph and GA reviews will roll on forever. Unless there is a comprehensive review with comments and some kind of consistency, I do not see a point of having a GA framework.
3. In my opinion, for vague or rather unclear statements, an editor's response has to be sought. It might at best be a minor edit if there is a disagreement and the entire statement does not certainly become unverifiable because the interpretation of particular word(s) were different (your answer to one of these issues seem to be suggesting exact copyvio from the source).
As a last request, let me know from your experience as to what should be done as an editor here based on the comments, so that I will proceed accordingly with the page concerned.
1. Books and journals do not have to be accessible to the reviewer as you state (although the nominator should be familiar with them).2. There does not have to be a comprehensive review of all criteria if there are sufficient issues identified for any one part. It is not expected that as part of the process significant issues will be found and given time to be addressed, articles should be as ready as possible before nomination.3. I am not sure what this is asking, but disagreements can be handled by discussion.What should be done as an editor is to edit the article in question and ensure the sources back up the information they are citing. From the examples provided, there are improvements that can be made in this regard.
CMD (
talk)
09:11, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
Hi, as reviewer I've provided answers to the points raised by Magentic Manifestations at
Talk:Taj Mahal/GA1#Response to Magentic Manifestations. I stand by my decision to quick-fail the article because the sample of six spot-checks clearly indicate the failure of citations to directly support material, as required by
WP:V. I therefore consider the article to be, per
WP:GAFAIL, a long way from meeting the requirements of criteria#2, which includes WP:V. The spot-checks have also revealed breaches of
WP:NOR and
WP:NPOV. Happy to discuss further.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
13:40, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
@
CMD, Thanks for giving clarity on the points. I do agree that there are clarifications needed + improvements that can be made and I am happy to do it. My whole point was that this could have been resolved through a simple discussion if the reviewer was willing to do it in the first place and it certainly did not satisfy the criteria for a quick fail (hence my request for a comprehensive review!).
@
AirshipJungleman29, I will sort these out and re-nominate it for a proper review.
The user
PearlyGigs is engaging in unnecessary and irrelevant discussions/mudslinging on the GA page, bringing out my past reviews/edits. This does not reek of someone who wants to engage on a constructive conversation.
@
PearlyGigs A discussion is what you ought to have done before. Request you to stop engaging in discussion not related to the subject at hand and not to go on a
WP:Witch hunt, which is against the basic rule of civility. Keep the discussion to the relevant subject at hand.
Magentic Manifestations (
talk)
16:06, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
Magentic Manifestations, I had walked away from this to concentrate on
Leon Leuty (GAN backlog) and
Charles the Bold (GOCE backlog). How you are handling a current GA review is entirely relevant to your criticisms of myself and
Thebiguglyalien in respect of
WP:GAFAIL and the way to use verification spot-checks, because it underlines your evident misunderstanding of the approved process.
As for "mudslinging", I think accusing me of feigning ignorance and suggesting that Thebiguglyalien endorses COPYVIO would qualify for that. Your being the victim of a witch hunt is rather an exaggeration considering that I have merely explained, albeit at length, my rationale for the GAFAIL, which includes noting that your objections indicate a failure to understand and comply with
WP:GAN/I#R3. Your approach to the Ken Anderson review seems to confirm this and I think it is a learning point for you. I am not interested in any of your "past reviews/edits". Ken Anderson is a current review, now on hold, and I'm sure you wouldn't want to pass it without getting confirmation that an offline source in your spot-check sample directly supports its material?
Perhaps, as you are obviously so offended by the failure of the
Taj Mahal review and so certain that I am entirely in the wrong, you should take your issues to
WP:ANI? I will be happy to discuss the matter there if you are not prepared to
WP:JUSTDROPIT.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
18:47, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
@
PearlyGigs How I handle my GA reviews is irrelevant to the GA review of the page discussed here. If there is an issue with such specific review, the respective nominator can address that and you are neither his/her voice nor the ultimate judge of things here. FYI, I have not failed the article for GA with dubious reasons for the sake of not spending enough time.
As for you cannot provide relevant reasons for the questions raised, you seem to be hell bent on dragging things irrelevant to the GA process at hand and proving that I am right. You seem to be offended as the issue was brought here and have added a larger retort bringing in a whole plethora of unnecessary jargon. As clarified by CMD here, try and understand the how the citations work and engage in a proper discussion next time, which could solve most of the issues and save time for everyone. Also, as two users have pointed out in the review page, try and familiarize yourself with the GA process by taking shorter, less traffic articles next time.
I have as such mentioned that the discussion on that particular GA is going nowhere and has dropped it. So please stay within the ambit of what is discussed and stay out of other discussions in which I am involved unless you have a due cause/constructive contribution or this is definitely going to go to ANI. Ciao!
Magentic Manifestations (
talk)
03:53, 4 July 2024 (UTC)
WP:DISENGAGE is one of the site's wiser policies. If anyone who reads this discussion should wish to ask me anything, or offer any useful advice, please go to my talk page. Thanks.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
09:24, 4 July 2024 (UTC)
2023 nominations
We're now half way through the year 2024, but there are still over a dozen nominations from 2023 that never got reviewed. If you're not sure what to work on, consider reviewing one of these:
The GA numbers are usually updated overnight, but there have been a couple of discrepancies recently so I just ran the update manually. The database now shows it as a pass, so the next time the GAN page updates your numbers should be up to date.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
19:48, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Broc and
Eiga-Kevin2: Hi, I was about to nominate this newly-promoted GA for
WP:DYK and found an interesting factoid in the Critical response subsection, until I spotted
close paraphrasing on a few texts in that section:
Article
Source
Tokyo-based film critic and journalist Mark Schilling wrote that Japanese critics frequently rebuke the films of writer-director Takashi Yamazaki, partly because "most are left-leaning" and view a few of his films, most notably the war drama The Eternal Zero (2013), as "nationalistic if not outright jingoistic". Schilling also mentioned that critic and historian Inuhiko Yomota was critical of Godzilla Minus One, calling it "dangerous".
Japanese critics, though, have long been hard on Yamazaki, one reason being that most are left-leaning and they see some of his films, especially his 2013 action drama “The Eternal Zero,” about WWII tokkōtai (kamikaze) pilots and based on a novel by rightist author Naoki Hyakuta, as nationalistic if not outright jingoistic.
Even “Godzilla Minus One,” in which a plucky band of civilians, including a disgraced former tokkōtai pilot, band together to save Japan from Godzilla, was called a “dangerous movie” by essayist and film historian Inuhiko Yomota in a Facebook post.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, American critics praised its drama, low-budgeted visual effects, and usage of kaiju as a metaphor for social commentary, with many favoring it over recent Hollywood productions.
U.S. critics have unanimously praised the film for the remarkable visual mileage Yamazaki got out of the project’s relatively small budget, as well as the story’s moving human drama and canonical use of the kaiju as a metaphor for social critique. [...] Godzilla Minus One seems to be earning especially favorable comparisons to Hollywood’s recent output of franchise sequels —
According to Dana Stevens, Ryunosuke Kamiki's performance is memorable because of his ability to convey the protagonist's vulnerability and emotional distress.
Kamiki’s anguished, vulnerable performance is one crucial part of what makes this protagonist so memorable,
Broc, were you able to examine thoroughly the prose for close paraphrasing issues? Because there could be more in this section and elsewhere. The examples above are just from English-language sources, I think the Japanese ones should be examined further. If it turned out that the article contains even more CLOP issues, then it may need to undergo a GA reassessment.
Nineteen Ninety-Four guy (
talk)
06:42, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Nineteen Ninety-Four guy thanks for pointing it out. I did run Earwig while doing the GA review and did not find major copyvio issues.
Regarding the close paraphrasing you pointed out here:
For the first sentence, I don't see the
substantial similarity between the left and right column. The article uses direct quotes when needed and provides attribution to the author in-text.
The other two sentences also provide clear attribution, in-text ("according to...") and with an in-line reference. However, I agree that they look rather similar to the original and could use direct quotes instead.
Per
WP:CLOP, Close paraphrasing without in-text attribution may constitute plagiarism however, in all three cases you raised there is clear in-text attribution. If these are the only copyright issues, I don't see the need for GA reassessment.
Broc (
talk)
08:16, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Nineteen Ninety-Four guy all I did was reading the policy, don't consider me a copyright expert. If you think the issue needs expert judgment, please raise it at
WP:CP.
I did check a few Japanese sources as spot check; however, I don't speak Japanese myself, and the machine translation is often unreliable.
Broc (
talk)
09:02, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
Talk on chat board about quick passes by relatively new editor
There is an ongoing chat about a few GA reviews that basic contain no recommendations for improvements....quick flyby passes if you will. I thought I would bring this up in a neutral manor focused on content before someone else does so in a more aggressive tone towards this good faith editor. The tone in the chat is very aggressive as if there's something else going on. @
PearlyGigs:
Both the examples below do not seem egregious in passing of in my view....as in nothing outrageous outstanding.
Hi,
Moxy. Thanks for the ping. I'm not sure what you mean by a chat board, unless it's the Taj Mahal topic above. I'm happy to have any of my reviews reconsidered as long as the feedback is constructive. Thanks again.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
09:11, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
PearlyGigs, these reviews are shorter than we tend to see, hence why they may appear to be flyby passes, although they are not a checklist so they clear that bar. One issue in both is that a reviewer should not just say "no evidence of original research or copyright issues", they are required to specific what sources were spotchecked to determine this. One mentions that most sources were inaccessible, which is fine, but it does imply there were one or two which could be checked.
CMD (
talk)
10:40, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
Hi,
CMD. In the first four reviews I did, including Meligalas and Talbot, I wasn't sure about how to report the findings and I followed what I saw in other reviews. I did check some citations at the time but didn't record them because other people don't. After Mike did the Norman Hunter review for me, however, I realised that the spot-checks need to be itemised and I've been doing that since. In fact, I've just completed the sample at
Talk:Suleiman of Germiyan/GA1. Hope this is okay. Thanks.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
11:05, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
Spot checks are relatively new compared to other requirements, and so are still sometimes forgotten. That example is great, but note the spotchecks are also to check for plagiarism in addition to verification.
CMD (
talk)
11:52, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
I noticed that
Breonna Taylor just got nominated for GA and then quickpassed. Both users here are relatively new editors; those being
Nickscoby, the nominator, and
DeadlyRampage26, the reviewer.
Obviously, we need more GANs and GANs reviewers and I'm happy when new people get into it - but there's certain articles that need more care with the review, especially for controversial or complex subjects; and we need very experienced reviewers for a nominator's first time approaching a GA and vice versa. There is, notably, no evidence that there was a source spot check of any sort performed.
The article is certainly in a good shape for a topic like this, but I feel like this is one really need experienced folks to peer over before we can count this as a proper GA.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
01:45, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
Oh OK I understand. I am new to this and was matching what I saw with the criteria but I think that if you think a more in depth review is required that does make sense
DeadlyRampage26 (
talk)
02:41, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
Hi
DeadlyRampage26, thanks for your review. I actually appreciated how you went through each criteria, the issue here is more interpretation than depth. On the source issue mentioned on your talkpage, there are a number of unsourced areas in the body (ie. not the
WP:LEAD), which we would generally pick up. Regarding what I mentioned above, GACR2 cannot be met without seeing if the sources do actually support the article and there isn't any copying. Now, it is definitely not necessary to go through and check every source, but reviewers should spot check a few to make sure. For example, the first sentence of Adult life is "In 2011, Taylor attended the University of Kentucky (Lexington) as a first-generation college student and returned to Louisville after one year", supported by
this source. That source does support attendance at the University of Kentucky in 2011, but does not seem to support the claim of being a first-generation student or a return to Louisville.
CMD (
talk)
02:57, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
I had been thinking about opening a discussion here as well. I think the process has gotten off to a great start: 12 nominees received reviews in the past month as part of the three "test runs". I support integrating it into the wider GAN process and adding links to it where relevant. As for additional coordinators,
PCN02WPS has shown some interest on the talk page. —
TechnoSquirrel69 (
sigh)
15:28, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
I'd also support integration into the GAN process as a whole. I'm happy to hop on as another coordinator to help ease things along if people are good with that. Might go ahead and start up another circle soon to keep the number of waiting articles on the lower side.
PCN02WPS (
talk |
contribs)
18:21, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
Important note
TheNuggeteer, the
WP:LEAD does not need its own sources. What is important for the lead is that it is a summary of the body (ie. not have anything significant that isn't in the body), the citations should appear in the body for said information.
CMD (
talk)
09:42, 18 July 2024 (UTC)
@
TheNuggeteer, that's two unnecessary fails you've done now in short order. Quickfails are really intended for articles that are badly beneath the GACR, not just articles that are merely imperfect. Significantly, articles are not expected to be comprehensive at the GA level, just "broad". You defend your fail of the above article by arguing that it's missing a section on campaigning, but it's not required to have this section (and doubly so if the sourcing doesn't support having such a section). I would recommend holding off and waiting for responses rather than failing nominations so quickly in the future. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)14:11, 18 July 2024 (UTC)
This page is an
archive of past discussions. Do not edit the contents of this page. If you wish to start a new discussion or revive an old one, please do so on the
current talk page.
Please nullify the reviewer's commitment to review due to lack of review actions (similar to abandoned review) on
Talk:Modafinil#GA_Review_3
I would like to ask appropriate administrators or appropriate persons involved in overall management of the GA process for a reconsideration of the review commitment by
User:Irruptive Creditor for the review page
Talk:Modafinil#GA_Review_3. The assigned reviewer has not undertaken any review actions, such as providing feedback or asking questions, leaving the review section empty and in a state of limbo, apart from my message where I tried to contact the reviewer. I tried to contact the reviewer on the review page, their user page, and via Wikipedia email, there has been no response; still, the reviewer was active on Wikipedia on April 1, 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 12 according to their edit history, yet, as of now, they did not reply to any of the outreach attempts; therefore, I believe that the commitment to review may have been a misclick.
As such, I propose that the review commitment be nullified, and the review request for the
Modafinil article be returned to the queue. However, rather than treating it as a new request, I suggest it retains its original position and date, as if the review had never commenced. This is akin to an abandoned review, but without the disadvantage of returning to the queue anew. I tried to engage with the reviewer, and the lack of activity from the reviewer’s side should not penalize the progress of the article’s review process.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
16:04, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I am unsure what you mean by "akin to an abandoned review"
Maxim Masiutin; this is an abandoned review, and the procedure followed for them is precisely to return the nomination to its original position in the GAN queue. I will tag the page for G6 deletion.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
16:47, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I checked now the articles nominated for review and the date of
Modafinil is as I requested, i.e. 23 February 2024, the date it had initially. This is exactly what I asked for. Thank you! I didn't know whether it is handled automatically when you delete a review, or you had manually to adjust the date. Please let me know if it was handled automatically, so If next time it will be the same situation, I will just ask you "to request a G6 deletion of the review page" as specified in
WP:GAN/I#N4a -- sorry for my initial lenghy request, as I don't have full knowledge of the what's going behind the scene.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
22:00, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
By the phrase "akin to an abandoned review" I meant a situation where a review process has been initiated but not followed through by the assigned reviewer. This is similar to an "abandoned review" where the reviewer has stopped participating in the review process, but with a key difference: in a typical "abandoned review" scenario, as per the Wikipedia instructions, the review would return to the backlog and be treated as a new request. This could potentially delay the review process as it would need to wait for a new reviewer to pick it up from the start in a priority similar to new nominations. However, in my case, I asked the administrators to handle so that the Modafinil article be returned to the queue, retaining its original position and date, as if the review had never commenced. Particularly relevant instruction in my case is (quote): "If the reviewer has not made any comments other than opening the review, it may be better to request a G6 deletion of the review page and start over" - still, it is not explained to which position the nomination should return in the queue. In my case, I asked that the review would not be treated as a new request, but rather continue from where it left off, thus avoiding the delay associated with starting the review process anew. This is what I meant by "akin to an abandoned review, but without the disadvantage of returning to the queue anew".
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
21:55, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
My understanding is that this was an abandoned review. The process described at
WP:GAN/I#N4a was followed. If there had been more comments and if the G6 were declined, I believe the nom would still be in the same place in the queue.
Firefangledfeathers (
talk /
contribs)
23:16, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Going to hijack this to ask about a related issue.
Talk:Melania Trump/GA1 received just a few bullet points about the first few sections before the reviewer CSD'd it, but an admin rejected the CSD and set it to second opinion instead. Is this the correct process?
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
21:57, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't see why that would help
Maxim Masiutin; in any case, you're not handling anything.
Thebiguglyalien, as the review is seemingly complete in the reviewer's eyes, and you're the one dissatisfied, I would say that asking for a second opinion is the correct process; you can of course also ask the reviewer to fail the nomination and renominate the article.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
23:20, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I probably would have declined the G6 also, since there were substantive comments made in the review—not saying there weren't other issues. I'm not sure what the next step is, but a second opinion seems reasonable to me.
Firefangledfeathers (
talk /
contribs)
23:16, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Hello! Just a quick question, is there a specific guideline that constrains the number of GANs one can nominate? My expectation would be in terms of fairness that the closer to one, the better, so as not to saturate a backlog and give other users equal opportunity to have users select their articles for review. Is this thinking correct? If so, is this explained anywhere?
VRXCES (
talk)
05:30, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
There's no maximum, although if you have more than 10 at once, anything new that you nominate gets temporarily hidden in a separate little collapsed box. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)05:56, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
New statistics tool to get information about an editor's GA history
I've created
a GA statistics page that takes an editor's name as input and returns some summary information about their interactions with GA. It shows all their nominations and reviews, and gives a summary of their statistics -- number promoted, number that are still GAs, and the review-to-GA ratio. Please let me know about any bugs or enhancement suggestions.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
14:20, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for creating this tool, Mike. I noticed when I input
my name, I'm credited for two nominations that weren't done by me. This is because I reverted some out of process promotions
(see this diff) and it appears the tool thinks I was the nominator, because I was the one who made the edit restoring the nominee template, even though the real nominator's name was present within the template.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
14:24, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
One other comment: the tool makes it look like my nominations to promotions ratio is lower than it actually is, because it is actually counting GAs later promoted to FAs against me (4 such articles in my case). Is there a way this could be accounted for by the tool?
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
14:27, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
My concern is not with the review ratio, I agree that it should reflect all nominations I've made to be fair. It's more that it makes it look like I've had 5 GAs that were delisted, when only 1 was actually delisted and the other 4 are now FAs. I'm not sure what the answer is for this.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
22:01, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
It appears about 70 GAs were not properly categorized in the database; not sure why, but I'm doing a run now that should fix them. Please let me know if you see more omissions.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
16:42, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Should now be fixed -- the tool was case sensitive for that value, but I've made it case-insensitive. If we ever get two users at GA whose usernames differ only in case I'll have to change it back.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
15:54, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Looks like the issue was actually that my search was "Lee Vilenski " rather than "Lee Vilenski" (mobiles tend to add additional spaces for reasons). Searching just for the username gives the correct info. In case someone else mentions it. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)12:49, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Ratio of reviews to successful nominations: Infinite
Obviously, I have done GA nominations which were then promoted to have that number that are still GAs; and I have done a number of reviews. All of these were within the last 6 months, so they were surely captured by ChristieBot.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
17:28, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
It seems the problem is the tool sometimes gets into a state where it can't get to most of the data. I fixed the problem for now by restarting it so you should see your numbers now, but it will no doubt happen again. I'll see if I can figure out what's going on.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
17:49, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
I've got a similar issue with my stats:
GA nominations: 0
Promoted GA nominations: 0
Promoted GA nominations that are still GAs: 14
GA reviews: 0
Ratio of reviews to successful nominations: Infinite
I tried checking PMC and Premeditated_Chaos in case the issue was with the space, or my signature, but no dice. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)18:26, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
User:Tim O'Doherty, who also has two FA nominations to his name, asserts to have nominated 8 successful GAs and reviewed 12 GAs, some of which I have been involved with. However, according to the GA nominations page and the new GA statistics tool, it shows that Tim has neither nominated nor reviewed any successful GAs. I was hoping you, @
Mike Christie, could look into this since ChristieBot and the new GA statistics tool were developed by you. Regards, and yours faithfully.
MSincccc (
talk)
06:44, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
However, it appears the bot that maintains the "still a GA" number is not recording the data correctly for users with apostrophes, so that number is still showing as zero for Tim. I've left the maintainer of that bot a message.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
10:38, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: I've had four successful GA nominations under my belt, but the tool indicates five, possibly due to the Prince George of Wales nomination being listed twice instead of once. Tim O'Doherty successfully promoted the article to GA-status, whereas AndrewPeterT abandoned the review after making just the opening comments. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
10:16, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
The bot decided that AndrewPeterT's review was a pass because there's no record of the outcome anywhere, and the article is currently a GA. I've added article history to the talk page and rerun the analytics for that GA, and the bot now understands it was not a promotion. Aishwarya Rai Bachchan is missing because in debugging over the last couple of days I inadvertently caused a problem for the part of the process that picks up new GAs, which is supposed to run once a day. It'll run again today; if you don't see the GA reflected in the tool's output tomorrow morning let me know and I'll take another look.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
10:58, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: On the project page
Wikipedia talk:Good article nominations, under the Royalty, nobility, and heraldry section where it indicates that the article
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh is under review, it still displays-Review: this article is being reviewed (additional comments are welcome). (13 reviews, 0 GAs) Tim O'Doherty (talk) 13:28, 23 March 2024 (UTC) However, we are aware that Tim has 8 successful GA promotions attributed to him both from the new tool and his own record. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
11:09, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
That number comes from
this tool, which doesn't correctly handle usernames that contain apostrophes. Per
this discussion I am planning to change that number from "promoted GAs that are still GAs" to "promoted GAs regardless of whether they are still GAs"; I can provide the latter number accurately, so the number should be correct then. It'll be at least a week or two till I can make that change, though, as I'm travelling this weekend and don't want to make changes when I'm unable to fix any problems they cause.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:41, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: Adding my thanks for the creation of this tool. Looking at
my stats, I see two oddities:
It lists me as the nominator for
Talk:California/GA2, and not the
actual nominator. This one is confusing because I'd never edited any page associated with that GA review.
Both should now be fixed. I don't know why the California one was assigned to you; I reran that analytics step for that page and it corrected it. For Freetown station, part of the problem was that there was no easy way for the bot to figure out what the outcome was of the first review; there was no "Failed GA" template, for example. I added article history to the talk page and reran the analytics and that seems to have sorted it out.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
21:24, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
I'll be working on the tool this afternoon trying to figure it why it keeps producing zeros after a few queries. In the meantime here are the numbers for Generalissima:
Is it possible to get a list of all GA reviews you're credited with? My personal count only has 104, I'm curious what ones I've missed ♠
PMC♠
(talk)19:17, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Hi Mike, would you consider a slight tweak of the sort order? The "reviews" are sorted by nomination date, so my first review is listed at number 5 (the first five are 5-2-1-4-3). It would make more sense to sort the reviews by review date (ideally by start of the review, actually). —
Kusma (
talk)
13:13, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
Very interesting, thanks for creating this. A slight bug in my results, may have been reported above. The tool reports 19 nominations, 19 promoted nominations, and 14 that are still GAs. None of my GAs have been delisted. Three have been promoted to FA. I think the discrepancy for the other 2 is that there were abortive initial reviews, and both were promoted after GA2. That's my guess, and it's not a big deal.
Mackensen(talk)22:55, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
(Also @
Trainsandotherthings, since you raised the same question): the "still GAs" isn't meant to imply that the others were delisted; just that they're not currently listed as GAs -- in many cases this will be because they were promoted to FA, not demoted. I'll find a way to phrase this on the tool's output page to make this clearer. Mackensen, I'll have a look at the other two you mention and see if I can figure out what happened.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
01:34, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Could the tool tell me which promoted GA nominations are no longer GAs (as a column in the table)? Could it even track which promoted GA nominations are neither GAs nor FAs? (Using myself as a test case the tool indicates there should be 4, of which I expect one to be the delisted
The Game (mind game) and three to be the featured
San Junipero,
The 1975 (song) and
Why Marx Was Right.) Also, I'm impressed that it seems to track page moves appropriately (
Nosedive moved to
Nosedive (Black Mirror)). —
Bilorv (talk)
18:47, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
It's not easy to tell whether a page is FA, GA, A, B, etc; there's no single place I can look. However, SDZeroBot does keep track of which articles are currently GA, so I could try checking that and see if I can match up the article names. I might be able to search for the article names in WP:FA or the various GA pages as well. I probably won't work on this for a couple of weeks as I'll be traveling next weekend but will put it on the list.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
22:24, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Promotion percentage
I thought it would be interesting to see the promotion percentage for our most prolific reviewers -- that is how many of their reviews end by promoting the article to GA. Here's the list for everyone with at least 100 reviews. This doesn't account for name changes (e.g. Malleus Fatuorum -> Eric Corbett) but I can probably fix that if I turn this into a query on the tool's webpage. I don't think there's necessarily anything negative about a very high promotion percentage -- a reviewer who picks up articles from nominators they know are very reliable might well have a promotion percentage close to 100%, for example, whereas a reviewer who makes a point of reviewing articles by inexperienced nominators (as I've done intermittently) might have an unusually low promotion percentage. Still, I think the numbers are interesting.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
16:26, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
In case anyone else is wondering why my percentage is so low: I don't think it's because I have unreasonably high standards, but more because I tend to pick articles to review where I can reasonably predict the outcome: either a quick fail or a relatively easy pass. I don't want to get drawn into games of whack-a-mole where I point out examples of problematic material in a nominated article, the nominator fixes those examples but not the general problem, and I have to keep finding more examples ad nauseam. For a while that was leading me to deliberately seek out nominations that could be (justifiably!) quick failed, hence my high fail rate. I think for the ones where I initiated a full review rather than a quick fail, my pass rate is much higher. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
19:04, 13 April 2024 (UTC)
Very interesting indeed. By my quick calculations, the mean promotion rate for our most active reviewers listed in your table is 86.3% (excluding David Eppstein pushes it up very slightly to 86.6%), and the median promotion rate for the reviewers listed is 91% – so you are marginally more likely to have your nominations promoted if it is picked up by a very active reviewer. This data doesn't let us say why that might be, but a couple of thoughts:
Historically reviewers had relatively lower standards than today and were more prolific because reviews used to take less time, and so are disproportionately represented in the "very active reviewer" dataset (there are a lot of names which I do not recognise, or which I do recognise as no longer editing, in that dataset, so this is entirely possible)
Very active reviewers have a better idea of which articles are going to pass (either because they recognise the nominator or they have a better preliminary assessment of how good an article is) and favour reviewing better articles
Very active reviewers are careless and more willing to promote articles which are not at GA standards (anecdotally I suspect this is not true given the names I recognise on the list)
Less active reviewers overcompensate and require things above and beyond the GA standard, and therefore fail things which an experienced reviewer might pass (I have certainly seen this behaviour, but I've also seen inexperienced reviewers pass things which I would not have, so I'm not sure which direction this actually tilts the stats in)
Passing reviews take less time on average than failing them, so the most active reviewers are the ones who review the most articles which go on to pass
The most active reviewers are the most willing to handhold a borderline article through to passing (perhaps because they generally spend more time onwiki, so they can devote more time to any given review)
Agreed that this is interesting! As you say, I suspect the main differentiating factor is the reviewer's personal choices about what kinds of articles to review. —
Ganesha811 (
talk)
18:26, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
Promotion percentage for GA reviewers with 100 reviews
Reviewer
Promoted
Not_promoted
% promoted
West Virginian
150
0
100%
Anotherclown
158
1
99%
Ian Rose
137
1
99%
Simongraham
116
1
99%
Rcej
245
3
99%
Grapple X
122
2
98%
ThinkBlue
356
7
98%
Iazyges
254
6
98%
BennyOnTheLoose
122
3
98%
Seabuckthorn
161
4
98%
Gog the Mild
156
4
98%
Damien Linnane
129
4
97%
Dr. Blofeld
231
8
97%
Shearonink
111
4
97%
CatRacer22
447
18
96%
Zawed
219
9
96%
LunaEatsTuna
117
5
96%
The Rambling Man
730
33
96%
Parsecboy
169
8
95%
Wilhelmina Will
123
6
95%
Dom497
123
6
95%
Hawkeye7
185
10
95%
Courcelles
239
13
95%
Gen. Quon
140
8
95%
AustralianRupert
155
9
95%
Ealdgyth
288
17
94%
A person in Georgia
326
20
94%
QatarStarsLeague
141
9
94%
Hog Farm
376
24
94%
Xtzou
121
8
94%
KCVelaga
120
8
94%
Usernameunique
132
9
94%
Peacemaker67
354
25
93%
Sturmvogel 66
872
62
93%
Nova Crystallis
161
12
93%
Eddie891
120
9
93%
Status
119
9
93%
Ruby2010
132
10
93%
Dough4872
330
25
93%
ProtoDrake
130
10
93%
Rp0211
104
8
93%
Auntieruth55
115
9
93%
Whiteguru
102
8
93%
Razr Nation
114
9
93%
Ecpiandy
160
13
92%
12george1
185
16
92%
Jaguar
682
63
92%
Yellow Evan
171
16
91%
Ed!
217
21
91%
Kyle Peake
506
49
91%
Tomcat7
171
17
91%
Vami IV
99
10
91%
Casliber
324
33
91%
Zanimum
107
11
91%
Jackyd101
125
13
91%
Cerebellum
91
10
90%
Aoba47
270
31
90%
Sainsf
281
33
89%
Mattisse
210
25
89%
Pyrotec
436
52
89%
Juliancolton
107
13
89%
MathewTownsend
179
23
89%
Tim riley
172
23
88%
AryKun
107
15
88%
Sammi Brie
261
37
88%
FunkMonk
261
38
87%
Miyagawa
225
33
87%
Carbrera
181
27
87%
Lemonade51
97
15
87%
GhostRiver
191
30
86%
Malleus Fatuorum
169
30
85%
Chiswick Chap
298
58
84%
Lee Vilenski
251
49
84%
Jens Lallensack
148
30
83%
Zwerg Nase
86
18
83%
Cartoon network freak
154
33
82%
Sarastro1
88
19
82%
J Milburn
386
85
82%
Wizardman
581
129
82%
Cwmhiraeth
133
30
82%
Hurricanehink
194
45
81%
MarioSoulTruthFan
165
41
80%
Arsenikk
245
63
80%
ChrisGualtieri
102
27
79%
Kosack
98
26
79%
Amitchell125
188
50
79%
Dana boomer
348
93
79%
Jim Sweeney
86
23
79%
Mike Christie
355
97
79%
Harrias
150
43
78%
Sasata
145
45
76%
Kingsif
102
34
75%
Calvin999
190
65
75%
Cirt
209
82
72%
Ritchie333
127
51
71%
Ganesha811
103
42
71%
Hchc2009
73
32
70%
Khazar2
253
117
68%
Premeditated Chaos
72
34
68%
Jezhotwells
386
187
67%
SilkTork
114
71
62%
David Fuchs
66
44
60%
MPJ-DK
59
44
57%
Aircorn
60
47
56%
SNUGGUMS
124
101
55%
Gary
101
112
47%
TonyTheTiger
101
113
47%
David Eppstein
35
89
28%
New mentorship page
The old good article mentorship page can be found at
Wikipedia:Good article help/mentor, where it consists solely of an outdated list of usernames. There's clearly interest in mentoring, as it managed to gather 27 mentors over its run, but a simple list of usernames isn't that helpful. I created a basic outline at
Wikipedia:Good article mentorship for a new mentorship process. The key difference here is that instead of having to choose from an intimidating list of names, aspiring reviewers can request a mentor in a similar format as
GOCE requests.
Subpages:
Wikipedia:Good article mentorship/Top – The transcluded text and formatting of the page. Transclusion allows for the separation of page content and discussion, including automatic signing.
Wikipedia:Good article mentorship/Preload – The default preload text when creating a request. This will create a new subsection, inviting the mentee to specify what aspects they need the most help with, and to state what subject area they'd like help starting a review in if they haven't chosen a nom.
It's just an outline right now, so please edit the text and layout. Formatting is not my forte. If even just a few people become regular reviewers through this, it would be a significant improvement to the backlog and the good article process.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
21:14, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Yeah, that seems pretty good to me. I'd be happy if newish reviewers (and nominators) had a guiding hand rather than some of the crazy threads we see after the fact here sometimes. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)21:27, 14 April 2024 (UTC)
Sounds great. Maybe we should start a new page rather than using the old mentors page, since that way we know all the mentors are familiar with this system and actively watching it. --
asilvering (
talk)
17:15, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
I agree, and I've created a new one with a similar format. Maybe once this is up and running a message can be sent to anyone on the old list who's still active to see if they're interested.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
22:24, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
All of the individual pieces should be put together now. But before this gets "launched", I assume the community here would want to discuss how much involvement a mentor would have, and if there are any specific aspects that should/shouldn't be included in their role. And whether the "norm" would be for the mentor to be more active on the review page or on the reviewer's talk page.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
23:14, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Thebiguglyalien, can you find a guinea pig who wants mentorship and do a first go at it and a debrief? Maybe it's just me but I think the direct approach will get us to a working model more quickly than talking about it here in the abstract. --
asilvering (
talk)
23:43, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I was thinking the same thing, I just wanted to make sure all of the obvious stuff was established. I was thinking about asking for a guinea pig on the
WP:DISCORD given its heavy population of editors who are moderately experienced but not heavily involved in these processes.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
23:45, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Yes, much better to ask mentees to request on a dedicated page and have active mentors pick requests up. Could we have some emphasis on "during your first review, consider requesting on this page for someone to provide feedback"? It would be hard to give useful feedback if someone just wrote "I'm thinking of starting GA reviewing—please advise". A mentor needs to have something the mentee has produced (though I suppose that could be contributions history) to scrutinise. —
Bilorv (talk)
21:31, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
Major usability issue in the user interface of the Good Article nominations list - proposal to fix
Let me raise the major usability issue in the user interface of the Good Article nominations list that I observed first time I submitted an article for GA review a few years ago.
The number of reviews and GAs in parentheses before the user name is misleading as if it was a number of reviews ans GAs that the article received, not the user.
Consider the following example:
Boot Monument (talk | history | discuss review) – American Revolutionary War memorial – (6 reviews, 0 GAs) Relativity (talk) 02:29, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
Review: this article is being reviewed (additional comments are welcome). (32 reviews, 19 GAs) Harper J. Cole (talk) 11:12, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
It looks like the article "Boot Monument" so far has 6 reviews and 0 GAs or 32 reviews, 19 GAs, suggesting a collective review process for a first-time users who don't understand the process.
Initially, it was only me who understood this way, but later I saw other editors understood the same way as me, suggesting that it was not my fault but a major usability issue in the user interface of the Good Article nominations list.
I could not find particular examples in the archive to prove my point that other users understood as me, but such cases existed. Maybe I will manage to find examples. However, please do not consider my examples as crucial for considering my request, evaluate my request without the examples.
My proposal is to present the list differently:
Boot Monument (talk | history | discuss review) – American Revolutionary War memorial – (nominated by Relativity who has a past history of 6 reviews and 0 GAs) Relativity (talk) 02:29, 2 March 2024 (UTC)
Review: this article is being reviewed (additional comments are welcome). (being reviewed by Harper J. Cole who has a past history of 32 reviews and 19 GAs) Harper J. Cole (talk) 11:12, 15 April 2024 (UTC)
The exact phrase "who has a past history of" can be slightly different, for example consider other variants, such as:
(nominated by Relativity with a track record of 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity who has accumulated 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity boasting 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity known for 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity with a background of 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity having 6 reviews and 0 GAs to their name)
(nominated by Relativity with a history of 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity who has previously achieved 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity credited with 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
(nominated by Relativity who has been recognized for 6 reviews and 0 GAs)
We can use any of these alternatives to convey the experience and contributions of the nominator and the reviewer in a clear and concise manner.
My proposal makes lines longer by having the names used twice per line: first time in parenthesis and the second time as a signature similar to that generated by four tildas ~~~~, still, it will resolve the usability issue.
If you are concerned about the lengths of the lines, remove the signature, the user name will be used only once. Signatures provide automated way to reply, but there is no need to reply in the GA nominations list.
Additional benefit of my proposal is that will not only make the list easier to understand, but it will bring clarity for new users on the steps of the GA review process. The current format can be confusing for new users who are not familiar with the Good Article nomination process. By explicitly stating the track record of the nominator and reviewer, we eliminate any ambiguity regarding the source of the reviews and GAs.
I believe that my proposal is consistent with Wikipedia standards. Wikipedia values clarity and transparency in its content and processes. The proposed change aligns with these values by making the information more accessible and understandable.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
22:38, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I will appreciate if the editors or administrator who take care of the overall GA review process nominate my proposal to the whole list of proposals as "Proposal N:..." by putting to to the list of the all proposals.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
22:45, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
The proposal drive has ended. And for what it's worth, I never once read the nominations this way, and I don't know if anyone else has either. The proposed change would require a huge use of space on a page that's already full to bursting.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
23:06, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
If your concern is space than my proposal also saves space wasted by tildas, so your concern is addressed by the poposal. Here it how it looks without tildas:
Boot Monument (talk | history | discuss review) – American Revolutionary War memorial – nominated by Relativity who has 6 reviews and 0 GAs.
Review: this article is being reviewed by Harper J. Cole who has 6 reviews and 0 GAs (additional comments are welcome)
Please take your concerns about accessibility and apply them to your own comments, which are probably second to none in sheer tediousness on this site. You have been told such before, on this very page—if you can't remember, you will find it in the archives; no need for miffling about with "maybes".
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
23:34, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I could not find in archives due to poor usability of the search feature. Wikipedia should not be for nerds. My recent example was related to the reviews
Talk:Ketotifen/GA1,
Talk:Modafinil/GA1, and other reviews by
User:BeingObjective. He submitted to many reviews and provided pass or fail message but didn't formally conclude the reviews, when we asked him to conclude reviews, he wrote that he he thought that it is a collective process and his opinion was only a vote. This was in 2023. When I submitted my first article I also thought the same way as
User:BeingObjective.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
00:56, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
If there must be a change this is the way to do it, but I am not convinced there is a need to make a change. Say in either case it is read wrongly, does this matter much? Not really.
CMD (
talk)
01:43, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
It matters much because misleads the newcomer into belief that the counters are related to the article being reviewed, that the review is collective process of votes so that if they click to add their vote to the already big number of reviews of the article it would not hurt.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
06:27, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
First of all, I don't think the current structure implies any kind of collective voting process. But let's agree that you thought it was - how many people aside from you have actually made that error? ♠
PMC♠
(talk)06:49, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't know how many people aside from me have actually made that error. The current structure has counters related to user near the article not near the user, there is no reason in positioning it that way. It should be posisioned correctly and unambigously.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
07:06, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
BeingObjective made this error, he wrote about it, but this list of users is not exhaustive, as we may not be aware of all cases, users may not complain or we may not ask them the reason. Typical signals to watch if when a reviwer submit to a few reviews and do not complete at least one.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
07:07, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
This usability error affects not only the newcomers but old editors as well who suffer from their nominations clicked by newcomers misled by this practice of putting counters of user near the article.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
07:13, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
As far as I can see BeingObjective never said anywhere that they were confused by the "(X reviews, Y GAs)" thing, so I don't know why we are citing them as evidence for changing the system. If we were implementing this from scratch I think I would support Skyshifter's proposed ordering, but I really don't think it's so significant that it's worth changing everything around now we have an established order. People are used to the current system, and the chance that changing it confuses people (and potentially breaks any bots or scripts which expect the layout in a particular order) seems to me to be a good reason not to change things unless there's a compelling reason to, which I'm really not seeing at the moment.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
14:09, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
If nothing else works, read the documentation principle means that you don't have to intentionally make obscure design to force the user read the documentation. You didn't comment on whether the current location of counters or that proposed by me and
User:Skyshifter is the correct one. If you prefer instead to discuss rule following without starting a new discussion thread, let us do so.
Before you ask others to follow the rules, start with yourself and show by example. I once joined as a second opinion reviewer and concluded the review as Fail while it was a procedural/technical error, I was not authorized to conclude the review as a second opinion reviewer, it was the exclusive competence of the first reviewer. Instead, you admitted my completion of the review and admitted discussion on merit on whether my Fail vote was appropriate or should I have changed my mind to Pass. This discussion was supported by other editors, yet nobody, following the rules, cancelled my completion vote and provided the way for the first reviewer to complete the review as prescribed by the rules.
As for the blocked user BeingObjective issue that you raised, let us also discuss it if you think it is important. He followed the rules on target audience in medical articles and helped rewrite articles in proper language removing jargon, but didn't follow GA rules. He made valuable contributions to the quality of articles yet got banned.
Folllowing rules on article quality and improving the article quality such as BeingObjective did has more merit as it brings more value to readers than following rules on GA process which brings more value to editors rather then users. We write encyclopedia for readers, we are not a social network. Blocking editors such as BeingObjective led that he was the only one editor ever who answered my calls for expert opinion, other calls just hang for months. More users you block, worse for the reader will be. Editors such as BeingObjective should not cope throught and design minefileds of interface design ambiguities and rules scattered through various texts - the thing he didn't manage to do. We now cannot ask him how he interpreted the GA counters because we blocked him.
George Johnson | "Hanged by mistake 1882. He was right we was wrong but we hung him and he's gone.
Are you seriously comparing this to a hanging? You ought to be blocked for the amount of bloviating you've done to date all based on your inability to follow simple instructions. If you really think that GAN "is collective process of votes" then we are clearly dealing with a PEBCAK error.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
21:25, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
Yes, once you block a Wikipedia user, this user is gone forever, we cannot ask BeingObjective about GA review because we blocked him.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
21:34, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
As for the user BeingObjective, I don't think that it was a PEBCAK error in that case. That user could rewrite articles for simplicity to be understood by general audience as required by Wikipedia, and he could provide expert help on Medicine when I used "expert opinion requested" template. You cannot do that, but you can understand GA counters. Each person has different abilities and we have to acknowledge that.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
21:38, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
And if you do not cease your constant tediousness, I will be opening a thread at ANI to achieve the same result for you. You may take that as a final warning.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
21:36, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
I've expressed my concerns that this is an unreasonable number of reviews to be doing at once and that they may not be fluent enough in the language to pursue reviewing at this time, but they disagreed. As I said to them, I appreciate their drive and I think they could do a lot of good for Wikipedia, but this isn't the best way to go about it. Previous discussions at their talk page (
permalink) and mine (
permalink).
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
08:06, 9 April 2024 (UTC)
I've noticed them, but as they haven't actually abandoned a review yet, I haven't engaged. I would suggest that they try to pick up reviews one at a time though.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
10:23, 9 April 2024 (UTC)
Thebiguglyalien, I agree. I would recommend all of their open reviews be reset. All they seem to have great intentions, I think there is a lot of learning to do before they are able to go through this type of reviewing process successfully. « Gonzo fan2007(talk) @ 14:44, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
I see this page now says, "Warning: nomination is malformed -- Status indicates review has started but there is no review page" re:
Lashauwn Beyond. I am hoping someone can fix this, so the review can get picked up. Was a bit disappointed with the result of the
Dwayne Cooper GAN (
Talk:Dwayne Cooper/GA1), but oh well! Thanks for any help with the reset here. ---
Another Believer(
Talk)16:40, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
SafariScribe appears to have realised they have bitten off more than they could chew with
Jude Law,
Pure Japanese and
Lashauwn Beyond, and requested to delete those reviews without correctly fixing the talk pages, which I have now done. I don't quite know what they were insinuating with "glorious contributions" at
Talk:Dwayne Cooper/GA1, but that was definitely a sub-par review; there is in any case no prejudice against immediately renominating.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
16:51, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
Another Believer, @
Thebiguglyalien, @
Gonzo fan2007, @
AirshipJungleman29, @
Asilvering, thank you all for such an impactful assessment, it'do add to my person like I always say. However, English is my first language and I do speak it fluently, I may also have some errors in my sentences which I admit and have taken care of it—reading more books, revising my proficiency, and other self improvement works. The problem is that: typo via keyboard, speed typing in mobile, feeling less concerned to the flow of the lang because while speaking, its not usually identified in where I stay, Nigeria. I appreciate what you all discussed and 've taken record of them. In not varying worlds, there are also justifications that seems provocative. One of the things I've learnt do far is that, people changes by day, there are more to improvement as well. I will also be proud of my reviews, even though some says it's not likewise. I'm not here for any argument but addressing such cases will make Wikipedia a better place. I love to see people correct me while I taken it to heart. On civilly, reverting should be done in reviews only if he/she have discussed that with the reviewer. Like I said, no one has found fault with my review, even when I give a little still promising truth of an article. What if I was about asking a second reviewer. Lastly, I appreciate all of you and your contributions but know that It's for the best. Thanks and will needs some piece of "good" advice. For reviewing, I'm stopping for now. Regards. — Safari ScribeEdits!Talk!17:45, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
The
Bertram Fletcher Robinson article's
GAN was obviously not thorough. The reviewer literally rewrote the GA criteria list with some AI bot and this was the only noteworthy thing the reviewer said:
"After a thorough assessment of Bertram Fletcher Robinson, I can affirm that it successfully meets the criteria for Good Article status on Wikipedia. The article is well-written, with prose that is clear, concise, and accessible to a broad audience, adhering to the Manual of Style guidelines in all respects, including the lead section, layout, and incorporation of lists. It is verifiable, with all references correctly presented and reliable sources cited inline for any content that could be reasonably challenged. There is no evidence of original research, copyright violations, or plagiarism. The article is broad in its coverage, addressing the main aspects of the topic while maintaining focus and avoiding unnecessary detail. It represents viewpoints neutrally, without editorial bias, and remains stable, not subject to ongoing edit wars or content disputes. Furthermore, it is appropriately illustrated with media that are tagged with their copyright statuses and have relevant captions, enhancing the reader's understanding of the subject."
We can see that this was just a rewrite using some artificial intelligence bot, further displaying the fact that this review was just rushed. Otherwise I see some redundancy in the prose as well as one of the sections being way too long. 750h+ | Talk 09:47, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
Two months ago, that may exceed our statue of limitations for reversion. The lead should be more comprehensive as well, but at a glance it's not a quickfail sort of situation where I'd jump to a GAR before posting on the talkpage.
CMD (
talk)
21:05, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
The main image also has obviously incorrect sourcing information (or the nominator is over 120 years old). —
Kusma (
talk)
21:19, 18 April 2024 (UTC)
Is this article really so bad that a quickfail was appropriate?
Is it normal for a GA reviewer to nominate an article they've reviewed for deletion without waiting for the nominator to make any appropriate improvements?
Jclemens (
talk)
00:30, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
Normally I would have left it alone, regardless of my concerns, but I've discussed the topic with the nominator and we both agreed to send it to AfD. In any case, I quick-failed on the rationale of Rule 3, which indicates that the subject needs broad and significant in-depth discussion. The discussion in the article is rather bare per reasons I've outlined in my comments on both the review page and in the AfD.
Has one ever considered Magneton? Pokelego999 (
talk)
00:34, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
Well, the quick fail and RfD are two separate acts. If you think the subject isn't notable, it can't be a GAN. Whether or not the reviewer wants to give the nominator enough time to find the sources is a bit up to them. Considering the AfD seems to be going towards a "redirect" verdict, it seems like it's suitably non-notable. No amount of work can make it notable.
I would be more sympathetic if the close paraphrasing wasn't ubiquitous and blatant as described. Good articles simply cannot contain any plagiarism. If there's an acceptable quick, unilateral GAR, it's done for these reasons.
Remsense诉10:26, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
This is the principal problem: you have been unable to understand for years that plagiarism is a serious problem.
Borsoka (
talk)
11:33, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
Still, none of the issues are outstanding—that is the key point. That and the fact that has been pointed out to you, you are
WP:INVOLVED so should revert you clousre and let a neutral reviewer pick this up.
Norfolkbigfish (
talk)
13:36, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
Please revert your close
Borsoka: per the GAR instructions, "After at least one week, if the article's issues are unresolved and there are no objections to delisting, the discussion may be closed as delist. Reassessments should not be closed as delist while editors are making good-faith improvements to the article." (emphasis added). Additionally, as you opened the reassessment, you are considered
INVOLVED.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
11:06, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
There's no interpretation to be had.
WP:GAFAIL applies to Good Article nominations, not Good Article reassessments. The reassessment process is outlined at
WP:GAR, which says that "After at least one week, if the article's issues are unresolved and there are no objections to delisting, the discussion may be closed as delist. Reassessments should not be closed as delist while editors are making good-faith improvements to the article." Clearly NorfolkBigFish was making improvements to the article, and so delisting it was out of process.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
14:44, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
I think at this point it would be fine to allow someone else to close the GAR now that eyes are on it, I agree that the GAR guideline says what it says.
Remsense诉14:54, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
I've made the backlog drives subpage "permanent" in the tab header to give it more visibility, since we've agreed that we ought to be having drives more often. We didn't agree on timing or number of backlog drives, though. Here's an inventory of most of the suggestions that seem applicable and possible:
We have three backlog drives a year
They are regular and recur in the same months every year
Some are themed/only address part of the backlog, to cut down on reviewer fatigue (this is proposal 14)
January and August look like good times
Swap Unreviewed nominations with Old nominations at Backlog Drives Progress (this is proposal 6)
In light of those, here is a proposal:
Three drives a year, in January, May, and September
The January drive is the "main" one, targetting all nominations, but especially old ones (ie, prop 6); bonus points are given for reviewing longer and older articles
The May drive is particularly newbie-friendly; we put extra effort into recruiting new reviewers, give points for mentorship, etc (I'm happy to brainstorm/co-ordinate on this)
The September drive is focused on some particular element of the backlog drive, and the co-ords will draw up a list of qualifying GANs in advance (possible examples: articles by editors with no GAs, articles by editors with more reviews than GAs, etc); points will still be given for reviews that aren't on that list, but the aim is to wipe out that list in particular.
In the earlier discussion, @
AirshipJungleman29 said I mean, sure, but all of them require people to do the things. If you want to showcase model reviews, reward good reviews, be a mentor, or anything else, get on with it. I stepped forward with GAR and have been basically running the process for a year. So, here I am, getting on with it. --
asilvering (
talk)
21:59, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
Thank you very much. Regardless of whether we will have regular backlog drives (I expressed against regular backlog drive on Proposal 1 discussion and gave arguments), I liked very much to have a list of past drives at
Wikipedia:Good_articles/GAN_Backlog_Drives#Past Drives. I didn't know that we had this list. Anyway, the special permanent page for GA drives, even if we will not have many GA drives the future, is a good think that I appreciate. For example, we can have announcements of future drives or analysis of past drives there.
Maxim Masiutin (
talk)
22:14, 16 April 2024 (UTC)
I like the proposal, although since the last drive was in March, I think it'd be too soon to have one this May. I'd like to see the next one about recruiting more reviewers—maybe with two streams of awards, "Reviewing" and "Mentoring". —
Bilorv (talk)
21:32, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I don't think it would be good to have a backlog drive this May, that's too soon. So the next drive would be September. Lots of time to figure out how best to make it newbie-encouraging. --
asilvering (
talk)
23:25, 17 April 2024 (UTC)
Sounds good to me. I considered those months but decided it was best to keep them at equal intervals, since my idea is that this will be a recurring thing with a fixed schedule. Since our most recent drive was all the way back in August of last year, September didn't seem too far away to me. But I don't think anyone will die of confusion if we end up with this year being March/July/October and then every drive thereafter is planned for January/May/September. (For all we know we won't stick with this thrice-yearly schedule anyway.) --
asilvering (
talk)
20:15, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Bilorv, how do you see this working? I understand you to mean something like dividing participants into two categories (newbies/reviewers and mentors), then giving a point for the completed review to the reviewer and the mentor? --
asilvering (
talk)
20:50, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't quite know. I think people would sort themselves by either
asking for a mentor or volunteering as a mentor.
NPP backlog drives often have some "re-reviewing" element with a barnstar, so serving as a mentor might earn you a "teamwork" barnstar. Maybe there would be some special barnstar for completing your first GA review. Or maybe the key element is just advertising (notifying WikiProjects, something well-timed in The Signpost, talk page messaging people we think could be interested). —
Bilorv (talk)
21:16, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
I nominated
U.S. Route 23 in Tennessee for GA status a while back, and the reviewer passed it with essentially no comments. That is extremely rare, especially for an article this long. I asked them about it, and they said that in general they thought it met the GA criteria, but weren't very familiar with the GA review process. As such, I would like to request a second opinion. I'm not asking for a reassessment; instead, I'd appreciate if someone would look over the article and suggest comments on the talk page in the same manner as the GA review process.
Bneu2013 (
talk)
22:09, 19 April 2024 (UTC)
The review is at
Talk:U.S. Route 23 in Tennessee/GA1. Not a pure checklist, but has no source checks and not too much explanation. Looking at the article, obvious questions emerge such as how the entire lengthy second paragraph of Route description could be sourced to two maps.
CMD (
talk)
00:10, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
The route description is sourced to a lot more than two maps. I'd appreciate if someone would be willing to take a look at it, though.
Bneu2013 (
talk)
01:41, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
In the look I took the paragraph is sourced to Tennessee Atlas & Gazetteer (Map) (2017 ed.) and
this one-page pdf. If there are other sources you should probably add them.
CMD (
talk)
02:41, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't think the title is itself a reason to do so. The lines between list articles and prose articles are sometimes blurry, and this is a case in point.
TompaDompa (
talk)
22:17, 21 April 2024 (UTC)
Go ahead and fix it manually; thanks. I had a look but can't tell what happened, but the bot did crash at around the time it should have promoted this article. I have an idea as to what caused the crash and will be trying to fix it soon -- it is happening every now and then.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:19, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
Child abuse in association football have been quickly failed for
WP:COPYWITHIN and
WP:OR. While the 1st is a quick fix (that I have done) there is no clear details about the later (see
Talk:Child abuse in association football/GA1). I have asked @
Schierbecker to provide more elaborate answer as I want to improve the article and did not receive any reply although the editor is active.
I understand there is no deadline here but not providing a coherent feedback from the beginning makes it hard to resolve the issues and - sometimes - contesting the editor decision as these decision are not made in vacuum and the assessor does not hold absolute powers to promote or fail an article.
I wonder if other editors can take a look and either become a
WP:3O or provide a more substance to the quick fail to help me improve the article. At the end of the day the GA process is there to help improve articles up to our standards and this is a very important topic that I truly want to get it right.
FuzzyMagma (
talk)
11:09, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't know what Schierbecker was thinking, but at a quick glance the first thing I notice is that there are five paragraphs of text (375 words) in the section §Definitions, of which the first sentence (36 words) is actually about child abuse in football; the remaining four paragraphs do not mention football at all and the sources all appear to be about child abuse more generally.
Once we get into the stuff which is actually about child abuse in football, it all seems to be random collections of stuff: for instance, all we are told about France is that "Ahmed G., former amateur football coach, was sentenced to 18 years for sexually abusing and raping young players." Is this an important fact about
Child abuse in association football? Is this the only, or most significant, case of child abuse in association football in France? It's unclear, because the only source is a contemporary news report. This is an article about a broad social issue, but it seems to be made up of a patchwork of random claims sourced to reports about individual examples of the issue: what it really needs is to be based on reliable sources about child abuse in football generally.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
12:05, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
The section title is “Known cases by country” not sure what are you confusing there.
The definition of child abuse in general is needed because it’s not different from football. It is not like there is a football specific kind of child abuse.
Separately from Caeciliusinhorto's insightful comments on this specific article, to answer the question of "contesting" a quickfail in general: there is no process for contesting a quickfail. If you think the reviewer was wrong and they aren't amenable to changing their opinion, you can always renominate the article. Keep in mind that any future reviewer may well agree with the first quickfail, and a failure to address valid concerns from prior reviews is explicitly a quickfail criteria in and of itself. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)12:23, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
I think it will be a huge waste of time to re-nominate the article without addressing the first reviewer comments. It will be a circular argument if the first reviewer did not comment properly and the next reviewer just agreed with them because they can read minds which I currently can’t (working on it. And that is why I am here
FuzzyMagma (
talk)
14:13, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
Sometimes, pinging or replying on an article's talk page doesn't necessarily notify an editor. Make sure to check the editor's talk page and inform them before posting here. — Safari ScribeEdits!Talk!18:58, 24 April 2024 (UTC)
Well, exactly. That is how it works though. Unless you think the GA Review was done in bad faith (in which case, this isn't the venue for a grievance), you can't change someone's mind about an article. If you fundamentally disagree with what they say, simply renominate. If you agree that it needs work, but want time to make those changes, just make the changes and renominate. You can't force someone to wait. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)07:11, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
Personally I think that raising the issue here (as indeed the OP has done) would be a legitimate course of action if you think the quick fail is simply inaccurate. That doesn't have to imply bad faith, merely that something fundamental was missed. Clearly not the case here, as we see from the replies - this quick fail was justified - but making someone renominate and go to the back of the queue again when maybe no other editor would have quick failed it, seems somewhat harsh. —
Amakuru (
talk)
10:37, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
I'd argue that the renomination should happen regardless, and a comment here stating your thoughts and allowing another editor to pick up the second review if they agred is a better course of action. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)11:18, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
What are your core sources establishing the subject of the article? Because at a glance, I can't see that the article has a backbone that forms its scope. Looking at the first 31 citations, only citations 1 and 2 discuss the subject of 'child abuse in assocation football', and then citations 28 and 31 discuss the more general subject of 'child abuse in sport' (the latter of the two being focused on Zambia specifically). The remaining sources may in instances provide support for the article, such as providing a definition of child abuse, but these should be supplementary. They shouldn't be predominant within the article. They also generally shouldn't be necessary. If a source doesn't comment on the article topic directly, it probably doesn't belong in the article. Consequently, there is copious material that isn't tied to the topic concretely and is probably extraneous. As is, the mainframe of the article is closer to a 'list of instances of child abuse in association football' with an unfocused definition section than it is to an article on 'child abuse in association football'.
Mr rnddude (
talk)
04:24, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
The only parts of the article that are
WP:DUE are the first paragraph of the "Definition" section and a highly summarised version of the "Children safeguarding in football" section. Everything else is extraneous information that should probably be cut. The "Statistics" section in particular strikes me as particularly
WP:SYNTH-like; this may be what the reviewer was referring to.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
10:15, 25 April 2024 (UTC)
GAN count of GAs now includes GAs that are now FAs or have been delisted
Per
this discussion I've changed ChristieBot to assign a GA promotion count to an editor by counting all GAs that were promoted, regardless of whether they are still GAs. There are a couple of pros and cons to this change:
SDZeroBot (which maintains the count used up to now) does not include any articles that are no longer GAs.
SDZeroBot does not include counts for editors whose name includes an apostrophe, though for Tim O'Doherty the maintainer did a manual update. I think Tim is the only editor active at GAN with an apostrophe in their name, so this was not a current problem.
ChristieBot does not include any GAs that predate the use of subpages for GAs (i.e. "/GA1" as part of the page name). SDZeroBot does include these. There are several hundred GAs like this but there are no active editors with more than a handful of GAs that old, so I hope this will have no noticeable effect on the counts.
As the nominator (
Norfolkbigfish) has
failed to detect several cases of plagiarism in the article
crusading movement for three weeks, I think the
reassessment process can be closed, and the article should be delisted. The article should as soon as possible be restored into the redirect page it used to be before Norfolkbigfish filled the article with texts copied from copyrighted material.
Borsoka (
talk)
02:55, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
The article has now been listed at
WP:CPN, which will handle the question of whether the article needs to be revdelled/redirected. If the copyright clerks decide yes, than the GAR close will be procedural. I suggest waiting for that.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
10:21, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
Older GARs needing comments
Posting here to encourage participation in reassessments from more people than the regulars at the GAR page. These are older discussions where improvement is not ongoing and which could use more participation.
GAN statistics tool now shows current state of the article
Per a suggestion from
Bilorv, the
GAN statistics tool has been updated to add a column that indicates if the article is currently a GA, FA, or neither. This has significantly slowed the tool down, so I may add a checkbox to make it optional to report this. By "slow", I mean it takes about a second for every ten GA reviews + nominations to be reported on. The most prolific GA reviewer/nominator has nearly two thousand articles to display, which means it will take their page about two or three minutes to refresh. For most people it should respond in under twenty seconds.
The tool looks for the strings "{{featured article}}" and "{{good article}}" in the article text, and assumes that anything that doesn't have either is either delisted or was not promoted. As usual, let me know of any issues.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
03:23, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
Thanks Mike, works for me on smaller accounts well, but time adds up fast as you note. Any chance checking for a category on the talkpage would be faster?
CMD (
talk)
04:36, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't think so -- the slowness is caused by having to open each of the GAs as a Wikipedia page, and doing that for the talk page probably wouldn't be faster. I just realized I could probably open the various GA listing pages and check for those, however, and similarly for the FAs. That could be faster.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
09:52, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
I just tried that change and reverted it; it was unreliable because so many GAs are still in the GA pages under names that are now redirects. I'll see if I can think of another way to do it, perhaps with categories.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:24, 29 April 2024 (UTC)
This nomination was opened for review by
Garethphua on 18 April but the actual review was never conducted; today,
750h+ failed the review, writing, I am failling this nomination as the reviewer is an unexperienced user with only 15 edits. Unfortunately, this is not the proper process—the nomination should not have been failed, but either the review unwound or deleted—and 750+'s advice to nominator
Nkon21, you may renominate the article, would have lost the nomination over six months of seniority in one fell swoop, since it dated back to 4 October 2023.
I have removed the inappropriate failure (in the form of a FailedGA template) from the article talk page and reinstated the original GA nominee template with page=2 and the 4 October 2023 date. Apologies to Nkon21 for the inconvenience. I hope that a more experienced reviewer ultimately selects your article to review.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
16:44, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
Sorry, i didnt understand how the GA review system works, i accidentaly opened the review and didnt know how to close it.
i didnt find the review instructions clear, i suggest those who know how to edit the instructions to do so. Thanks in advance and apologies for the inconvenience.
Garethphua (
talk)
04:23, 30 April 2024 (UTC)
I kinda forgot what was unclear, but could you add how to remove a nominatiom, i couldnt find the button or source to edit for it.
Garethphua (
talk)
03:04, 2 May 2024 (UTC)
Garethphua, that depends what you mean by "remove a nomination". If you mean to take the nomination entirely off the list, you would remove the template from the article talkpage, but that's not an expected process for new reviewers. If you mean how to close a review once you have started it, the instructions state to contact the nominator or to leave a note here. I'll add a wikilink for that second part if that helps.
CMD (
talk)
03:44, 2 May 2024 (UTC)
I couldn't help but notice the lack of activity in this GAN page: neither the nominator nor the reviewer has touched the review page since it was created. Can someone intervene?
Nineteen Ninety-Four guy (
talk)
14:37, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: I've passed the article
Aishwarya Rai Bachchan as GA earlier today and even updated the article's talk page as well as the Good Article nominations page. While ChristieBot has added the good article icon to the article, it is yet to leave a message on the nominator's talk page. Furthermore, the GA statistics tool recently created by you also shows the article as "Under review" at the time of writing. Would you please look into the matter? It would be greatly appreciated. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:12, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
ChristieBot crashed in the middle of that run; it is crashing about once every fifty or a hundred runs, for reasons I haven't yet figured out but am working on. It won't post that notification now so you may want to do so manually.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
21:34, 3 May 2024 (UTC)
Edit request
Hi, if someone here could action the edit request for
Software maintenance, that would be great. I would like to nominate the article at GAN, which I can't do until then. Thanks in advance
Buidhe paid (
talk)
03:06, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
Next step in helping new reviewers: Improved instructions or reviewing guide
I've got
WP:Good article mentorship up and running, but we should be taking other steps to help reviewers. First, I'd like to get
User:Thebiguglyalien/Good article reviewing guide into the process and make it into something practical. Would there be any interest in cleaning it up, moving it out of userspace, and making it into a more "official" guide for the reviewing process? Or perhaps to rework the instructions based on a condensed version of something like this? Our current instructions explain the technical aspects of starting and ending a review but say very little about the review process itself.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
01:19, 5 May 2024 (UTC)
I think some thought should be given to merging this with
WP:GANI.
WP:RGA is technically a guideline, but is so out of date I'm not sure it's supported by consensus. A page which combines them and
WP:WGN would be ideal.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
03:12, 5 May 2024 (UTC)
The question then is what a merged page would look like. Would it be a full detailed set of instructions like in my userspace page, or would it be a more condensed "here are the basics of what to do and what to check"? I definitely support merging WGN into this as well. At this point I wouldn't object to marking RGA with {{Historical}} or {{Superseded}} and making a revised GACR/GANI the guideline, if there's consensus for that.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
22:38, 6 May 2024 (UTC)
Well, RGA is so out of date that people have started adding reviewing instructions that should belong there directly to GANI (steps 1 & 3). I think what could happen is a thorough update of RGA to bring it to current standards, as befits its "guideline" status, and replacing any non-procedural instructions at GANI with a pointer to RGA. I think a boundary between the "what to do" and "what to check" is helpful, and if consensus comes in the future that it's better to have them together on the same page it can be merged then.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
23:04, 6 May 2024 (UTC)
Maybe I'll draft something more guideline-like and post it here for feedback, unless someone else wants to take a whack at this.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
22:54, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
GAR talk page notices
How long are you expected to wait between posting a notice on the talk page of a GA and opening a reassessment?
QuicoleJR (
talk)
17:26, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
Strictly speaking there's no requirement to post a notice prior to opening a GAR at all:
WP:GAR simply says "consider raising issues at the talk page".
Featured article review, which does require a talkpage notification, says "give article watchers two to three weeks to respond to concerns" so if you are leaving a note on the talkpage that seems like a reasonable timeframe to work with.
Caeciliusinhorto (
talk)
17:40, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
So, there is technically no requirement for a talk page notice for GAR, or to wait a specific amount of time after giving the notice?
QuicoleJR (
talk)
17:43, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
There's not. The idea originated with
this sprawling discussion and has not been widely practiced (I think I'm really the only one doing that). I've been waiting two weeks, although since I only try to have two GARs open at a time, it's been more intermittent than that.
Hog FarmTalk17:44, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
All the same, it's an excellent and civilized thing to do, and if the article is being watched by the GA nominator or anyone else who cares about it, the notice will very likely save the need for a GAR.
Chiswick Chap (
talk)
10:47, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
Suggestion for a GA for an article
Hi team, could anyone please consider the article
Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja (film). It is regarding a movie and when i done a normal check I felt its fine. Could anyone please go through it and can you give me any suggestions before submitting for GA
Paavamjinn (
talk)
22:05, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
You could ask in
WP:PR. Here, it is a place where you could ask for suggestions to improve the article to become GA or FA, or any higher-status class articles.
Dedhert.Jr (
talk)
14:39, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
While I greatly admire ZKang's work, I believe he fundamentally erred in failing this GAN on notability grounds, given that notability is not a GAN criterion. In the first place, taking instruction from
Wikipedia:What BLP1E is not, I seriously disagree that this is an example of BLP1E. Even if it were, that should have been an AfD matter, with the GAN put on hold until after the conclusion of the AfD discussion. Just wanted to hear what others think before putting this up for a renom. Cheers,
KINGofLETTUCE 👑🥬19:11, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
A few things: 1) yes, you are right to say that notability is not a GA criterion, but 2) they appear to suggest that they failed the review because the article didn't meet
GA criterion 3a), not purely on notability grounds, and 3) you could surely have brought this up on ZKang's talk page, rather than before the 1,200 page watchers here?
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
19:49, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
and also sort of as a general enquiry about whether or not notability ought to even be relevant to GANs. David's reply seems to say yes but I wonder if there are differing philosophies on this or if some more concrete guidance exists...
KINGofLETTUCE 👑🥬20:37, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
The banner quickfail criteria is for existing banners, not ones that could be added. Of course, if the situation is serious enough that banners could be added, it might be a quickfail for those serious reasons. The fail sounds partially related to
Wikipedia:Very short featured articles, of which there are indeed different philosophies. I suspect on a quick look at the article (without looking at the sources) that the question surrounding notability is more about framing (person vs event), and that is also perhaps philosophical.
CMD (
talk)
00:39, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
The "or needs" wording of
WP:QF reads clearly to me as being about ones that could be added. If it were only about existing ones, that part would be irrelevant. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
02:32, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
Well, it does say that they should also be "unquestionably valid", so failing because notability is suspect should probably be followed with an AfD.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
02:37, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
The "or needs" pays heed to the needs, which would be the "those serious reasons" I mentioned. The banner addition in that case is a symptom, whereas existing banners are a cause on their own as it shows the nominator has not bothered to clean up the article. I do not think this was technically a quick fail, as there was some review and a few days thought. That said, I would agree that this sort of fuzzy disagreement should be taken to another venue. Not sure AfD is right though, as a reshaping of the topic wouldn't delete the article.
CMD (
talk)
02:51, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
Would anyone be willing to review the aforementioned article? I assure the community here that this is not a drive-by nomination. I am the article's second-highest editor and the fifth-largest author. Furthermore, the four authors ranking above me in terms of authorship have been inactive for a long time. Victor Trevor last made an edit on English Wikipedia in October 2023, Soulparadox in April 2018, Light Show in March 2024 (though he has made only 37 edits to English Wikipedia since November 2021 and none to Zuckerberg's since March 2017), and Likeanechointheforest since May 2023. Hence, I look forward to someone taking it up for GA-class assessment. I will most willingly respond to any comments made on the GA Review talk page so that the article can be improved to GA-class. Regards and yours faithfully,
MSincccc (
talk)
07:52, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
You should be aware that GA nominations may take a long time to be reviewed, usually many months, and there's no order or predictable timetable to it. You'll just have to be patient. In the meantime, why don't you review someone else's article? It is not required, but you can benefit your own nomination by just reducing the number of open nominations awaiting review. That way, when a new potential reviewer shows up, there would be a higher chance that yours will be the one selected.
Cambalachero (
talk)
16:04, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
I'm not discrediting your work here, but fifth-largest author is a fairly generous phasing when it's 2.5% of the prose. I understand that the other authors are not active, but some things are just not reasonable to GA when no single author has contributed to that degree.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
16:20, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
I'm inclined to agree; I want to assume good faith here, but taking an article mainly written by others and doing a couple tweaks before submitting it to GAN seems pretty firmly against the spirit of things here. When other people have done far more for the article, even if they're inactive, they're the one who deserve the recognition, not the final person to add a couple finishing touches.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
17:38, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Remember that the GA process is about the article, not the editor. The rules about the "main" editor are only meant to prevent clashes over who gets to decide if the article is ready for nomination, to answer the points that may be made during the discussion, and other tasks related to the process. It's not meant to be an award. If a user finds a decent but abandoned article and nobody else minds if he does so, he may nominate it and manage the discussion as if he had written it himself.
Cambalachero (
talk)
17:46, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Totally agree. If Stephen Hawking wrote the best article Wikipedia has ever seen and forgot to nominate it for GA/FA, I wouldn't insist that it remain B-class forever just because he's dead and no one could hope to improve it. MSinccc has posted an appropriate message on the talk page, and if the nomination is successful, I don't think anyone would mind one of the original editprs putting a GA badge on their userpage if they return.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
17:50, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
I did leave a message on the article talk page. To note all facts, all the authors above me are presently inactive as I have previously mentioned. In that case, the article will never come to GA-class status. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:01, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Please understand that I'm still learning and growing, being a kid. I've dedicated considerable time and energy to contribute significantly to all the successful GA promotions attributed to me. My sincere desire was to elevate the aforementioned article to GA-class, and I've diligently worked towards that goal. I eagerly await feedback from others. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:00, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Well, I've made numerous prose additions to the articles of William and Catherine. I've never run a bot on those articles (the ones I ran had to be reverted as they were from Google Books). Furthermore, I've given up my claims of authorship on the Sherlock Holmes article. Also, I did contribute significantly to Philip's article to make it GA-worthy. Regards and yours faithfully.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:44, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Because you have consistently misrepresented your contributions at the expense of others. Because you have repeatedly been told your approach is wearing. Because you seem to regard GAs as a right. And because you have never attempted to change your approach even when being called out on being wrong (see discussions passim, cf. Sherlock, cited above).
——Serial Number 5412918:19, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
The Sherlock Holmes article and its drive-by nomination have become a strawman by now. I have apologised and not repeated my offence. I am open to suggestions to improve my work here, and I have kept my word. Regarding this article, I have contributed to it over the last two-plus years and am quite familiar with its content. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
18:35, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
It might come across better if you framed any future posts in this vein along the lines of explaining the work you have done on the article, your familiarity with the sources, etc, as opposed to just saying "I have such-and-such authorship percentage." The first is substantive, the second is merely a statistic. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)18:43, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
That's practically the opposite of what I suggested. Do you understand what I mean when I say "explaining the work you have done on the article, your familiarity with the sources"? ♠
PMC♠
(talk)18:59, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Premeditated Chaos Apologies for any confusion. I'm well-versed in the events to be covered in Catherine and William's articles, the appropriate sources to cite, and the preferred wording. I've extensively worked on citation parameters and articles using British English. Currently, I'm focused on articles about David Cameron and Liz Truss, two former British prime ministers. In the future, I aim to bring articles on William, Catherine, and Bill Gates to FAC once I find relevant book sources and more high-quality content to support the nominations. Being a child, I'm open to suggestions and would appreciate mentorship, especially regarding GA nominations like this one for Zuckerberg. Wishing you all a great day ahead (though it's already evening here). Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
19:13, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
There you go. That's the kind of post you should be making when you're preparing to bring these articles to GA. Don't highlight authorship percentages, highlight the substantive work you've done. You'll get much less pushback. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)19:28, 26 April 2024 (UTC)
Just to note that
Liz Truss was promoted to FA last October, and the FA nominee is still active as a steward on the article. I’m not sure it needs any additional work done on it. -
SchroCat (
talk)
04:10, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
SchroCat has correctly highlighted the inexactitude of
MSincccc's involvement in
Liz truss; re. Zuckerberg, you are 2.6% author and as far as added prose goes... there is an anonymous IP—with 1.9%—who have contributed more. Sorry about that!
17:56, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
If someone genuinely wanted to get
Mark Zuckerberg to GA, I assume they'd do the basics and at least sort out the
WP:LEAD, which is full of novel information. Lawyering about authorship when the basics haven't been done is not promising. If it is not withdrawn I am inclined to quickfail it.
CMD (
talk)
11:42, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
I would appreciate it if a reviewer could provide some comments that I can then endeavour to address. I would be glad if a reviewer left some comments which I will try to follow. Regards
MSincccc (
talk)
13:31, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis I meant that instead of quick failing the nomination, it would be helpful if the reviewer who eventually assesses the article leaves constructive comments that I can address to improve the chances of the article becoming a successful GA. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
15:46, 27 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis I've condensed the lead section and relocated all citations except for the Forbes references, which pertains to net worth, to the article body. I'm proceeding in good faith and welcome any feedback that could enhance the article's chances of becoming a GA. Regards and yours faithfully,
MSincccc (
talk)
06:28, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
It could be integrated into the article body, and I'm prepared to do so. However, if we opt for this approach, it would need to be applied consistently for all billionaires whose net worth is sourced from either Bloomberg or Forbes and deemed relevant for inclusion on Wikipedia. This includes figures like Elon Musk, Bill Gates, Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Jensen Huang, among others.
Additional comment: @
Chipmunkdavis, Could you please review the article and provide feedback there? This way, I can address the comments and work towards the article achieving GA status. It's just a request. Regards and yours faithfully,
MSincccc (
talk)
07:01, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
I'm not involved in this, but I, for one, find it extremely irritating when GA nominators nominate obviously-subpar articles, without a clue why they are subpar, and then expect reviewers to hold their hand as they go step by step through a rewrite of the article. That is not what reviewers are for. If you are going to nominate an article, you should (1) understand the GA criteria, at the level of being able to conduct a competent review, (2) review the article you are about to nominate, yourself, and find the points where it might not meet the criteria, and (3) fix the article, on your own, to clean up the problems you found in your self-review.
What you seem to be expecting instead is that someone else does all of the work in finding problems, and all of the work in describing step-by-step how to fix those problems, and then you get all the credit for the GA for being their typist. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
07:26, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
I don't wish to claim credit for a GA if the article is being improved based on the reviewer's feedback. CMD suggested removing the Forbes citations related to Zuckerberg's net worth from the article lead. My response was that if we remove them, it should be done consistently for other billionaires' articles as well. Currently, the article is well-written with no cleanup tags, unreliable sources, and clear and consistent prose. I've been working on the article for over two years. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
07:37, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
My suggestion is that the article in question, as well as others you mention, adhere to
WP:LEAD. Such adherence is per
WP:GACR a component of being "well-written".
CMD (
talk)
10:02, 28 April 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis This is the first comment left by a user who has just made three edits on English Wikipedia-You could possibly mention the many controversies he has been in, as well as the popular jokes about him being a lizard. Please look into the matter. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
13:56, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis Should I renominate the article after having saved the page? It is very unlikely that the user will post any further comments. Looking forward to knowing from you. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
05:21, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
Please do not close the review yourself. The standard course of action is likely that it will be closed and the nomination restored to the original date, but that does not need to happen after one day, others may comment.
CMD (
talk)
05:26, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis Can the review be closed if the nominator hasn't posted any comments beyond the opening ones and has been inactive for more than a week? Looking forward to knowing from you. Regards.
MSincccc (
talk)
07:59, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis Who will be closing the review in that case then?
WP:GAN/I#N4a states that the article can be re-nominated in such a situation by the nominator. Looking forward to knowing from you. Regards
MSincccc (
talk)
17:28, 8 May 2024 (UTC)
Per my comment earlier on the standard course of action, if that is followed you will not need to renominate as the old nomination will be restored.
CMD (
talk)
07:01, 9 May 2024 (UTC)
Hi. I wrote a biographical article that went through DYK and did well there (51,000 views). I would like to improve the article and bring it up to GA status. I'm an experienced editor but I've never edited for GA, so I would like to work with a mentor who is experienced with GA reviews and could make editing feedback or suggestions. Main issues might be prose quality and breadth of coverage.
I'm currently in the "2024 Election Wiki Scholars" WikiEdu course, so they can give me guidance on various technical aspects. Please let me know if you or somebody you know might mentor me with this effort. Thanks!
ProfGray (
talk)
12:07, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
Hi, I did not post there because that is for new GA reviewers, not for editors hoping to nominate for a GA. Right?
ProfGray (
talk)
12:55, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
It's
Jex Blackmore, who might be seen as controversial, but so far there has been no edit warring, just some vandalism during the DYK spike in views. I'm a scholar of religious studies and I came across this intriguing person.
ProfGray (
talk)
13:03, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
(
edit conflict)If you aren't feeling brave enough to nominate this for GA right away (at a very cursory glance there are no major red flags!) I'm happy to take a look at the article and give you some feedback – looks interesting! Aside from asking here, you might consider
Wikipedia talk:WikiProject Women in Green. Blackmore is arguably technically out of their scope, but their sister project
women in red explicitly includes "women and other gender minorities" and there may well be people watching that talkpage but not this one with relevant thoughts. — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk •
contribs)
09:28, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
Talk:Mark Zuckerberg/GA3 should be removed. The review was taken by a user who has 4 edits and wrote: You could possibly mention the many controversies he has been in, as well as the popular jokes about him being a lizard..
750h+13:19, 10 May 2024 (UTC)
As far as I can see everything worked correctly -- the nominator was notified and the GAN was removed from the main page. The bot runs every twenty minutes and takes about eight or ten minutes to run so in the worst case you could be waiting thirty minutes after you complete a fail or pass for the bot to do its job.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
10:53, 11 May 2024 (UTC)
Certainly not best practice. If a reviewer opens a review page and does not want to proceed, and no actual review has happened, they can request that the page be deleted which allows for a new page to be created. You could request that. Otherwise, we can reset the nomination date for the new review to the original one.
CMD (
talk)
04:27, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
I just adjusted the close on the review page to be a withdrawn reviewer rather than a failure in addition to updating the article talk page to restore the nomination's seniority and remove the improper "FailedGA". Thank you,
Spinixster, for bringing this to our attention.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
04:32, 7 May 2024 (UTC)
ChristieBot is unable to transclude the GA review to
Talk:Israeli invasion of the Gaza Strip (2023–present), which is semi-protected. As a result it's been crashing every run trying to do so, and so has not been updating the main GAN page. Per
WP:UAL it seems as though ChristieBot should have the extended-confirmed permission which would allow it to edit this page, but it can't. I'm about to go to work and so don't want to edit the code since I won't be around to see if it works, but if someone could either give the bot the permission, if that can be done without going through an approval process, or manually transclude the GA review, that should fix it. The former is the preferable fix if it can be done quickly since that way it would be definite that that's what the problem is -- UAL does seem to say bots automatically have the permission so I suppose the problem could be due to something else. Anyway, thanks for any help with this.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:13, 16 May 2024 (UTC)
This was a bug in the library. I've added a workaround but the transclusions may not work properly right away; I'll monitor them and fix any that fail manually until it is working reliably. It is not going to be possible for the bot to transclude reviews for protected pages; those will always have to be done manually.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
21:20, 16 May 2024 (UTC)
Should be a rare enough occurrence. Is there somewhere the bot dumps an error message noting the need for manual intervention we could look at?
CMD (
talk)
02:32, 17 May 2024 (UTC)
The bot currently has a couple of different ways of handling errors. Errors that are going to cause the same problem over and over again (e.g. it can't parse a GAN template because the nominator has created it manually and messed up the parameters) prevent it from adding that nomination to the GAN page, so it reports those in a section at the end of
WP:GAN. That's not suitable here, because this is a one-time error: once the bot has tried to transclude the review it never tries again. The bot also writes some errors to
User talk:ChristieBot/Bug messages, which is intended more for my use -- it tracks unexpected events so I can figure out if there are things I can do to make the bot more reliable. I could have the bot write to that page, but I don't think it would be worth anyone watching it for this super-rare event -- this is the only time it's occurred in the last year and a half. I could have the bot leave a message here on the GAN talk page if that would be OK? The other notifications the bot leaves will still work -- the talk page messages, for example. At the moment there is some activity around
the bug, so it might be the case that the people who maintain the library will fix it in which case it will just start working again.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
14:10, 17 May 2024 (UTC)
Return and Query
@
GAR coordinators:
Hi all, hope that you're doing well. After some (extensive) time away I've been getting back into the swing of things (and sorting through my many notifications). I noticed I was rather fairly delisted for inactivity. Not sure that we have any policy on re-activation/addition; shall I run again for approval, or what is the thought? Thanks!
IazygesConsermonorOpus meum05:07, 18 May 2024 (UTC)
Is there any longer a distinction between these two (now that nominations are simply sorted by date), except that the "Highest priority" box seems to have fewer entries? If not, should we merge the two boxes together? UndercoverClassicistT·
C09:25, 16 May 2024 (UTC)
The lists are slightly different (the fifth entry currently showing for me is
Blackpink for the oldest unreviewed noms, and
William L. Keleher for the most urgent). Whether they are sufficiently different for it to be valuable to have two separate lists is another matter: currently four of the five entries are the same.
Caeciliusinhorto (
talk)
18:42, 18 May 2024 (UTC)
My question is whether my standard of editing is anyway near GA-level, and if it is worth bringing any of these articles to GA level? Any advice would be appreciated, and no problem if the feedback is that I am far off. thanks.
Aszx5000 (
talk)
18:53, 19 May 2024 (UTC)
Without doing an actual review, it's difficult to say whether the prose is great, but it's certainly laid out in a good way and everything is cited. I'd suggest picking your best one and nominating it. The first review should give you a good indication of what the reviews are like. For what I see, they look like they'd be pretty likely to pass after fixing issues from a reviewer.
Thanks for that Chiswick Chap. I am also pretty active on WikiCommons and do try and hunt for images that help explain things in the articles (either historically, technically, or as examples of leading routes). Delighted that it made an impression as well. thanks again,
Aszx5000 (
talk)
15:24, 20 May 2024 (UTC)
I notice that as I have cleaned up the climbing topic articles that IPs have returned to take an interest in them. I would love to see if I could take a lot of the key articles in climbing to GA-level.
Aszx5000 (
talk)
15:26, 20 May 2024 (UTC)
Is there a page where people looking for a QPQ (GA review for a GA review) can seek out one another, if not, should it be created or would that be discouraged?
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
10:36, 27 May 2024 (UTC)
No, there isn't, and suggestions to create an "official" page of this type were
discussed and did not find widespread support, and many people are skeptical that it is a good idea at all. —
Kusma (
talk)
12:14, 27 May 2024 (UTC)
One of the reasons the GA process had a bad reputation a decade ago was the practice of mutual positive reviews with minimal scrutiny. So any structure for QPQ should have something in place to prevent low quality reviews and quick passes. —
Kusma (
talk)
14:25, 27 May 2024 (UTC)
Hello, this is exactly what it says. I passed this article for the
Vinland Saga anime series far too quickly (combination of factors, including should've known better), as pointed out by
Reidgreg. When I raised the possibility of a GAR, they were hesitant due to how recent the GA was and recommended I bring the subject up here. Thinking back, I was wrong to pick up and review the article as I was then, and a second opinion or re-review of the article is needed.
ProtoDrake (
talk)
14:47, 28 May 2024 (UTC)
Hi
ProtoDrake, thank you very much for bringing this up here. Regarding the review,
Talk:Vinland Saga (TV series)/GA1 is unfortunately insufficient, it does not indicate any review of the article. The article should receive a full review (see
Wikipedia:Reviewing good articles). Regarding steps, this is recent enough (12 May) that I don't think a GAR is needed, the review pass can simply be reverted. You are the only editor (besides Christiebot) of the review page, so you could tag it as
WP:G7 if you still feel it wrong to pick up the review, and do not want to do a full review and would like someone else to instead. (You could also I suppose tag it as G7 and reopen it yourself again, if for some reason you want to both review it yourself and have a technically fresh start.) If you have questions about reviewing, you can always raise it here or discuss with a
WP:GAMENTOR. Best,
CMD (
talk)
02:20, 29 May 2024 (UTC)
Mysterious auto-failure
See
this notice on my Talk. I believe this happened because the
page was moved (undiscussedly), thus making the nomination page appear not to exist, since it is under the older page title. The page's Talk itself doesn't show it as having failed. In any case, I'd like to just erase the nomination, since no review ever took place, and it's either falsely shown as failed or as awaiting a second opinion (when no first was ever given).
Zanahary (
talk)
20:23, 31 May 2024 (UTC)
Zanahary, don't you want the article reviewed at GAN? We could "erase the nomination", but that would lose all of its seniority. It was indeed the page move that caused the problem, because while the article moved, the review page is still under the article's original name; I'm not sure whether it's best to see if the article gets moved back, or just move the review page now, and let it get moved back to its original name if the current request to restore the original name prevails.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
23:44, 31 May 2024 (UTC)
Maybe let's wait until we see the result of the page move, but I would rather just start again without seniority than have it marked as second opinion needed, which is a designation I imagine scares off any would-be reviewers who aren't very experienced with the process. I think it's enticing enough a topic that the loss of seniority would be alright.
Zanahary (
talk)
23:46, 31 May 2024 (UTC)
It can be started again with seniority by simply editing the timestamp in the nominations template. However, it looks as if the problem is that the page mover agrees to reverse the move but cannot do so for technical reasons? If so, and there's no disagreement about moving the page back, I can do that -- anyone with the page mover right (which includes all admins and a few others) can do that.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
12:32, 1 June 2024 (UTC)
Thank you very much @
Mike Christie! I see now on its Talk it is listed as unreviewed, but on the nominations page it says it wants a second opinion. Is it possible to resolve this to indicate that it's awaiting review, not a second opinion?
Zanahary (
talk)
01:08, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
No, BlueMoonset
fixed it by resetting it to the next page number without changing the timestamp. And thanks for removing the move request; that was careless of me -- I should have done that when I did the move.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
01:56, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I adjusted the GA nominee template so that rather than being a "second opinion" request, it's treated as a regular nomination awaiting a reviewer, with no loss of seniority. Sorry,
Zanahary, I meant to post that here, but got distracted by some incoming email. I hope the nomination gets picked up soon; there are, unfortunately, several dozen older noms also waiting. I think there's a GAN backlog drive coming in July, so maybe then if not before. Best of luck!
BlueMoonset (
talk)
02:46, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
Hello everyone. I'm looking for advice since I haven't really encountered this kind of thing before. The review page for
Shirt (song) (link
here) was created 16 days ago and I was told it would be started by the end of the month. I reminded them a week after that, and they still said they were busy. I gave it another week, and I see
they went on a wikibreak on 31 May. Requesting a 2O; should I get a new reviewer?
PSA 🏕️🪐 (please make some noise...)
06:36, 2 June 2024 (UTC)
Further to the
above discussion(pinging
AirshipJungleman29,
Premeditated Chaos,
Skyshifter, &
Kusma), I understand the issues that may arise with a one-on-one voluntary QPQ reviewing and I agree that the concept will sacrifice the quality of reviews. A potential alternative solution could be a discussion space where it pairs up 3-5 users and then A reviews B, B reviews C, and C reviews A's articles, thereby mitigating the COI in each review, I am happy to set it up and coordinate. Thoughts?
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
03:28, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
I would submit my GANs to one of these!
Especially if cross-pollination is encouraged, both in people being invited to join the review circles (we wouldn't want them to get stale editorially) and people within the circle encouraged to comment on GANs in the circle other than their primary.
Remsense诉06:08, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
I think it's shaping up nicely! It may also be useful to allow users to indicate their preference on which other article they'd like to review. —
TechnoSquirrel69 (
sigh)
19:42, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
We seem to have enough participants in this thread to conduct a test run. It may also be beneficial to keep the trial more lowkey and see how things turn out before opening the process to general participation. I don't have a strong objection, however, if other editors think differently. —
TechnoSquirrel69 (
sigh)
01:50, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Chipmunkdavis: The coordinator would be another individual and would pair and notify users, I am happy to assume the role. If there's another way it could work I am open to ideas.
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
02:10, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
Moving sections (sport)
Hi guys - I know I've asked this previously, but the cue sports section (within other sports) now has 200 entries. Cricket has a section of its own, and has 51 less GA articles. Do you think we could swap them around? I get that cue sports aren't quite as populated as some of our other topics, such as football or motorsport (I'm working on it though!), but it is significantly larger than one we already have. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)13:01, 24 May 2024 (UTC)
Furthermore, if I recall you asked back in the Vector 2010 era, we are in the bold new Vector 2022 world where the lists are vertically compressed. I would support creating a lv3 Cue sports heading in recognition of the substantial work done in that topic, and the usability of the lists. Please don't do it boldly though, lv3 might have technical ramifications. However, I see no reason it can't be split into multiple lv5s now, that can all be moved together later if there is consensus to split. I would appreciate a split by sport, I saw at a glance some pool and some snooker, there might be others, but it's not easy to tell from some event titles, and obviously impossible to just tell from the biographies. As for downgrading Cricket, interesting question and we are
about to lose another GA there, but doesn't need to happen to split off Cue sports.
CMD (
talk)
13:28, 24 May 2024 (UTC)
Sure, I wouldn't make the change myself. There are a few issues with doing changes by specific sport, as there's quite a bit of overlap. Almost all snooker players have played pool or billiards (and vise versa). The other issue is that we have "snooker" but then also a mismatch of all other cue sports. We'd have to have an "other cue sports" topic, which I'm not a fan of as it suggests it's lesser than snooker.
I do think there is a suitable bio Vs non-bio split which would be suitable if there was a level 3 header for it. (~60 bios, with the remainder split between tournaments , governance and articles about the different games). Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)13:58, 24 May 2024 (UTC)
Don't mind a bio split, mostly coming from the angle of being a bit more informative to those less familiar with the various sports in question.
CMD (
talk)
15:24, 24 May 2024 (UTC)
ChristieBot only cares about the sections of the GAN page; it doesn't interact with the GA sections at all. If this won't change the GAN page organization or create new nomination categories or keywords it shouldn't require any changes to ChristieBot.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
13:24, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
I think this would be more for Novem, because the GA promotion script uses the different headers. Good to know ChristieBot has no issues though. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)13:56, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
Guidance on nomination process
With respect to the assistance of the nominator, I am having a few problems completing a GAN review of
Rayman (video game) and need some guidance. Some of these problems are compounded by delays in me responding to the nominator, but I'd really appreciate some feedback so I can improve how to handle situations like this nomination for best practice in the future.
Basically, the nominator, despite their best intentions, has largely contributed to the article by rewriting the prose. Where they have done that, it is riddled with mistakes. As seen in the
review, nearly every sentence of the article has some issue or other that needs to be fixed, mostly in terms of tense and wording. That is fine and I am working through that with them, but I am only at the copyediting stage of the review. I'm not sure the reviewer understands some of the feedback and whether I could do better in explaining to them. For instance, a suggestion to 'omit' something from the article led to them adding that word in multiple places. Or some substantive feedback, such as suggesting the topic sentences of review paragraphs thematically reflect the content, seem to be ignored. I feel like what I am doing is really, in the end, directing them to write word for word what I feel the article should be to meet the standard.
How can I best help the nominator, and how should I best handle a review process like this where the nominator has good intentions and is trying their best, but there is a lot of quality assurance issues in their contributions and nuance that is being missed?
VRXCES (
talk)
22:57, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
Honestly, if the article is not up to GA quality, and the nominator is having trouble understanding the fixes that would be necessary to bring it to GA quality, you may simply need to fail the nomination. There is no shame in doing this as a reviewer. It is the nominator's responsibility to make sure the article meets the criteria. An inability to understand what looks to me to be fairly simple feedback is not something you're responsible for. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)23:18, 9 June 2024 (UTC)
750h+, per the note at the top of the page, it is best practice to attempt to speak to the nominator first before dragging them to a public noticeboard. Have you tried to do so? ♠
PMC♠
(talk)07:55, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
It is best to message on their talk page. I left a message there almost an hour before this was opened, please add to it if you wish.
CMD (
talk)
08:58, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
Very weirdly, this was partially clerked by a user and an IP. Given no activity from the reviewer, I have properly reset the template.
CMD (
talk)
02:18, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
What to do when a reviewer picks up an article scheduled for a circle
I started a review for an article that I later found out was scheduled for one of the
GA circles that
GMH Melbourne is organizing. I think those circles are a good idea, but I'm mentioning this here since this conflict will probably come up again and it would be good to make it clear what the expectations are. I think the point of the circles is to avoid substandard QPQ reviewing, but guarantee a review of the participants' nominations. If someone outside the circle picks up one of the articles, I think that's a good thing -- it means the person scheduled to review no longer has to do that review (though we might encourage them to pick up another article instead). I don't think there's any reason for a reviewer to deliberately avoid articles scheduled for circles, though I wouldn't deliberately pick one either.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:50, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie: I've also been trying to come up with a process for when this situation occurs. Two options I have thought of are a) asking the user to provide comments on the other reviews in the review circle, or b) ask the user to review another article in the GAN list in the spirit of fairness. I also agree that we shouldn't prevent articles scheduled for circles from being reviewed.
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
12:47, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
There shouldn't be any pressure not to review articles that are listed as available for review. If the list at WP:GAN wasn't representative of the ones actually available, I'd feel less inclined to look through it and start reviewing a nom. They should be available to anyone up until the moment that it's decided the nom is part of a circle, and once it is decided, the review page should be created.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
14:19, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, this. Another layer of friction for reviewers is also likely to be especially offputting for people who have never reviewed before, and discouraging new reviewers seems like a decidedly undesirable outcome.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
14:35, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
If this initiative is to go forward, perhaps the circles could be organised in advance, allowing those involved to 'soft nominate' articles and only fully nominate them when the circle is agreed. This should allow them to be picked up very quickly by the other members of the circle.
CMD (
talk)
14:24, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
I don't think there's a need for that -- it would add more overhead to the circles, which seem to be moving pretty quickly at the moment (a good thing). I like GMH's suggestion that if a circle article is picked up, the editor who was scheduled to review it should be encouraged to pick a random other article to review instead.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
14:27, 11 June 2024 (UTC)
Perhaps I should add a message at {{GARC-new-circle}} saying "If another user starts a review you were assigned before you were able to, kindly find another article to review at
WP:GAN and inform the circle below."
GMH Melbourne (
talk)
01:10, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
Does a previous failure to meet GA criteria stay on?
I recently reviewed and promoted
Tamil Nadu to Good Article status. It was unsuccessfully nominated a decade ago and the old notification of failure to meet GA is on the Talk page. Does that notification stay on the Talk page, even though it's now a GA? It seems to contradict the current status unless read carefully.
Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (
talk)
13:23, 12 June 2024 (UTC)
GAN sorting uses different categories than Good Article nominations?
Is there a reason why
User:SDZeroBot/GAN sorting uses a different category system than
Wikipedia:Good article nominations? I was looking for a few articles in "GAN sorting" to see how long they had been waiting for reviews, but the categories don't match up at all; the only way to find an article was to do word searches by the article name. For example,
Charlemagne is listed under the "History" category in "Good Article nominations", but under "Culture/Biography" in "GAN sorting";
Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth is listed under "Social sciences and society/Law" in "Good Article nominations", but under "Geography/Regions/Oceania" in "GAN sorting". It would be helpful if both lists used the same categories.
Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (
talk)
13:44, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
The bot's sorting is done automatically using a machine learning tool, and includes articles under every topic it thinks is relevant (so you will see that Charlemagne, for example, is listed as "Geography/Regions/Europe/Western Europe" and "History and Society/History" among other topics). I imagine they differ because the ORES classification was developed after the already-existing GA system, and they weren't concerned with making them compatible - the ORES system the bot uses is used to categorise e.g. AfDs as well as GAs, which had developed its own categorisation.
I suppose we could change the way the
WP:GAN page works to sort articles using the bot rather than the current system, but that seems like a bunch of work for no clear benefit.
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
13:55, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
The benefit is that it makes it easier to use both pages. There is no way to use the Sorting page to sort by the categories on the GA nominations page. Suppose I want to see the oldest article in the History category on the GA Nominations page, to review it because someone’s been waiting a long time for it. There’s no way to do that, because the History articles are scattered about by an entirely different category system, putting Charlemagne in “Culture/Biography”. There’s no way to see the oldest “Law” articles waiting for a review: the decision of the High Court of Australia (Fair work) is sorted under “Geography”. I don’t see any benefit from having a sorting system that isn’t based on the categories used on the Good Articles nomination page.
Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (
talk)
14:09, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
There’s also the point that relying on a bot/AI to determine the categories is less useful than relying on the judgment of the nominator who decides which category to put an article in when they nominate it. The decision of the Australian High Court in the Fair Work article is notable as an article about an important legal issue from the highest court in Australia. But the bot ignored that, and decided it was most notable because of its geographic location. Judgment by a human is more accurate here than a bot.
Mr Serjeant Buzfuz (
talk)
14:15, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
If you don't want to rely on the AI classification (I never do!) then you shouldn't use the bot which uses AI classification. You can use
User:ChristieBot/SortableGANoms if you want a sortable list which uses the manual categories. (But in the specific case you are talking about the bot did classify
Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth under History and Society/Politics and government; the ability to classify a nomination into multiple relevant categories seems like a useful feature actually!)
Caeciliusinhorto-public (
talk)
14:41, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
they're all getting difficult to read due to the giant walls of text. what are people's thoughts on how to split? ...
sawyer * he/they *
talk19:37, 6 June 2024 (UTC)
Could split United States history into a subsection, which would make a small difference although I suspect that subsection would remain in need of splitting sooner rather than later. There are a couple of options for European history, British Isles history seems an obvious one as being easy to define geographically and has quite a few items, splitting on continental Europe geographically is a bit more tricky with anachronisms (eg. what do you do with
Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin), although clearly defined regions like Italy might work. There's probably a couple of obvious subgroups for Monarchy, Royalty, and Nobility with 20+ units, perhaps staring with Roman/Byzantine.
CMD (
talk)
02:34, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
yeah i think splitting geographically will make the most sense, even with edge cases. splitting off British & US-American items would be a great first step ...
sawyer * he/they *
talk02:44, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
Many of the figures in Historical figures - other are miscategorized. Many of them are nobility, and should be put in the Royalty and nobility section. Some are military figures, and should be put in the military people section. Religious figures should put under religion, artists under their respective sections, etc. There's even some animals, which should be filed under Animal domestic breeds, types, and individuals.
For politicians, monarchs, nobility, etc. it seems like they could be split by continent.
Ah, didn't realise you'd already started. I'll handle the 12 moved, despite personal misgivings that the animals were likely mostly respectable historical figures.
CMD (
talk)
15:14, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
i'll start moving some of the "other" figures into their proper sections, so that we can know what the actual makeup of the "other" section is. ...
sawyer * he/they *
talk15:15, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm not strongly opinionated, aside from feeling it would be best to have something clear and consistent for animal individuals. Might split them into their own lv5 for a start, there's about 25 and I'm not seeing the natural link with breeds/types.
CMD (
talk)
15:40, 7 June 2024 (UTC)
I've split off the individuals (there were 30, although given the articles are just single names the line length is relatively short) and saved
Olaf the Peacock. Would be good to hear more thoughts on where they should go.
CMD (
talk)
16:16, 10 June 2024 (UTC)
Shifted Judy as well and finished the matching. If there is a consensus to move them, should be easier to now move them all together.
CMD (
talk)
02:01, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
Do aviators fall under the subject section Transport?
Asking because unlike some of the other subject areas, Transport does not mention related people/professions as included, and none of the nominations currently there are for biographies.
AddWittyNameHere13:14, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
For what it's worth, when I reviewed
Jean Batten, the article was placed under world history, historical figures: other. However, there is a section within transport entitled air transport people which might also be an option (and in fact I'm wondering if I put Batten in the wrong place).
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
23:31, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
Good to know I'm not the only person uncertain of where to place a nomination, then! Mine might be a little more "squarely" placed in transport than Jean Batten because it's about an aviation pioneer that was also an airline transport pilot, so guess I'll go for transport, I suppose, but yeah, world history - historical figures was my other guess. (It could even technically fit under military because he was a military pilot for a brief portion of his career, too--but that's not what his notability comes from, so not a great fit altogether)
AddWittyNameHere23:39, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Trainsandotherthings Yeah I agree that Jean Batten fits better under "air transport people" than "world history, historical figures: other". That historical figure section is massive (400+ articles) while air transport people only has 9. Jean Batten's article and achievement is also similar to
Juan Bielovucic, who is already listed within the air transport people category.
OhanaUnitedTalk page13:57, 14 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm not too sure if this article meets the criteria for what makes a good article. At a glimpse:
Amateurish prose: Indeed, due to the fact these places...
Thus in the goal to inherit the company, Fusajiro was adopted...
Fusajiro then has the idea of using the Hanafuda cards of lesser quality...
Many other examples of this.
Awkward wikilinking: Just as Hanafuda cards were allowed again in 1885 so too did occidental playing cards (Standard 52-card deck) become allowed...
Grammar errors: ...these western cards so called "Trump" by the japanese population...
Randomly inserted sentences: (The sen is a subdivision of the Japanese yen which became obsolete in 1954.)
Questionably sourced media (one is straight up ripped from
Eurogamer)
The
GAN review seems to be lacking as well, with a very light prose check, no discernible source spot check, and no copyright check, which I'm 99.8% sure is just an incorrectly-done review. Should I proceed with a reassessment request, or can this GAN be rescinded altogether?
joeyquism (
talk page)
01:12, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
That was a very recent GAN, closed 9 June 2024, it can be reopened if needed. First step is to raise it with the reviewer.
CMD (
talk)
01:18, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
I believe the lack of source and copyright checking and the amateurish prose are both grounds enough to go ahead and reopen the review. Of course I assume
WP:GOODFAITH from both parties, but it seems that this is a case of
WP:CIR. I've informed both the reviewer and nominator that the review has been reopened.
joeyquism (
talk page)
02:56, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
I think "amateurish" and "CIR" are a little harsh. It just looks like people who are working to learn best practices and could use some helpful advice—something that tends to be rarely given for up-and-coming editors.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
02:59, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
Fair enough - I didn't mean any offense by my use of these terms, just for the record. I've also extended a hand to both editors in case they are in need of any help during the GAN process.
joeyquism (
talk page)
03:07, 13 June 2024 (UTC)
Oftentimes when looking at song GANs, there are several nominations where all of the sourcing is about the album and none of the sources are specifically about the song. This raises some notability issues and goes against
WP:NSONG, but how should we handle this at GAN? There's of course the perennial dispute about whether non-notable articles should be passed through GA. But besides that, can these song articles pass criteria 2 and 3 if all of the sources are about the album? These are common enough that I feel some sort of consensus or precedent should be established.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
05:17, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
Hey all. A GA nominator whose article I was reviewing has just been temporarily banned for one month for sock-puppeteering. I haven't had to deal with a case of a nominator being blocked mid-review so I don't know what to do. Should I leave the review on hold, pending their return? Or should I just close the review as failed? (I still don't think it meets GA criteria as of now). --
Grnrchst (
talk)
10:52, 16 June 2024 (UTC)
It appears ChristieBot is getting partway through its run and then crashing before it can update the GAN page. I suspect I know what the problem is but I can't do anything about it till I get home this evening about eight hours from now, so GAN is not going to update until at least then.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
13:22, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Raising
this change for discussion here. Removing the repeated summary seems reasonable, but making the navigation more inaccessible is going to add further friction to the manual cleanups needed by making it harder to switch between lists. Wondering if there is a way to keep some sort of more compact navigation bar at the top.
CMD (
talk)
14:13, 15 June 2024 (UTC)
Pinging @
Prhartcom as the person who hid the summary (twice). My take is that this should be consistent across all of the different GA topic subpages, though I see this has been done on all of these pages. A compact navigation bar would be great as well, if that's possible. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
15:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for the ping and the feedback. Glad everyone likes it. Oh all right, I suppose now we do need a compact navigation bar to each of the 15 topic pages; I will start work on that. It will be very clear yet simple, similar to the page contents seen at the top of the
Wikipedia:Good articles/all page (that combines all the topic pages). Cheers,
Prhartcom (
talk)
03:06, 19 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm sorry to have to put this issue here, as I'm in principle against any quarrels with fellow editors, but I think my
GA nomination of Charles De Geer was not properly reviewed. Apart from a general point that
the article is not focused enough, which for reasons I tried to put forward I found was unfair or at least not obvious, I received very little constructive input on what to improve and how. (For the record, I would also like to underline here that while it may seem an unfocused article if treated as a bio of someone notable only for being a naturalist, I would tend to agree; however the subject of the article was notable for several different things, which should reasonably be reflected in the article.) Where I did receive such input, I either made the relevant changes or put forward my reasoning as to why I had written what I had written in the first place. Despite this, the nomination was closed as failed by the reviewer
Wolverine XI, without any real reply to my points in the review. I tried to raise the issue with the reviewer on their talk page but got a similarly short and negative reply. I therefore raise the issue here; I am of the opinion that my nomination was not given a proper review and my replies were not taken into consideration by the reviewer. I don't know what the procedure for this kind of complaint, and I'm sorry to have to raise the issue, but I really think this has not been a fair and constructive process. I'm very open to constructively improve the nominated article, or any other reasonable course of action, of course. Finally just a note to say that I may struggle in the coming days and weeks to respond quickly as I will be out sailing until early July.
Yakikaki (
talk)
09:43, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
It's a harsh review, and Wolverine XI's communication has been really quite poor, but I don't think it quite reaches "improper": the paragraphs on Lövstabruk do breach criterion 3b), in my opinion, by including too much unnecessary detail. Of course, if you don't feel the issues have merit, you can renominate immediately.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
12:52, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
Put it back into the queue when you're done sailing, and I'll be happy to give it a full review. I
have experience with highly detailed biographies of naturalists from Nordic countries.
Esculenta (
talk)
16:51, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
I have closed it. It looked like they had closed the discussion thinking that was all that was required. Let me know if it's the wrong category. Lee Vilenski(
talk •
contribs)22:16, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
I've split off Cue sports, and left Cricket as is for now in case there is more input. Let's see if it works smoothly. In the meantime, please divide it up into some subgroups. Best,
CMD (
talk)
14:04, 22 June 2024 (UTC)
I've changed my mind about hard caps on open nominations
In the past, I've objected to hard caps on how many nominations someone can have open at once. My reasoning was that it's unfair punishment to our most active content creators and that it only masks the problem. After running the numbers, I believe these arguments are outweighed by other factors.
As of the most recent
GAN report, there are 677 nominations under review or awaiting a reviewer. There are 58 nominators with at least three nominations, making up 340 noms in total. We make up almost exactly half of the backlog. If we emptied the "Nominators with multiple nominations" section by reducing everyone down to two noms, the backlog would instantly decrease by 224 nominations, bringing us down to 453. That's one third of the total backlog just made of those extra nominations. If we limit it to a more generous five noms, that's still 95 extra nominations beyond that limit.
To the argument that limiting noms only hides the full backlog, it's about how the noms are weighted. Right now, these "power users" make up half the backlog despite being a minority of the total nominators. This is unfair to the people who wait months longer in line just so we can double, triple, quadruple dip. To the argument that it makes it harder for efficient nominators to nominate, there's a way to make your nom a higher priority: review! Review the noms above yours in that category, or just review in general to lower the backlog. Even if new noms instantly take their place, those will have a more recent nom date. This way, there won't be one person who still has eight other nominations ahead of you after you review one of theirs. Or you could review for people who only have one nom and won't immediately replace it, which is often a new nominator who should get priority anyway. Alternatively, there's
Wikipedia:Good article review circles where you can get a reviewer much more quickly.
Once my current nominations are done, I'm going to voluntarily limit myself to no more than five at a time. But these limits only have significant effect if we adhere to them collectively, and I'm switching to a support !vote on such a measure. I'm also going to ping the few people who have more open noms than I do in case they'd be interested in a similar voluntary limitation:
Magentic Manifestations,
Chiswick Chap,
Aszx5000,
Gonzo fan2007,
Ippantekina,
Aintabli,
Epicgenius.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
02:22, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Frankly, I think this is not a very good idea. The "power users" are often our most experienced and dedicated contributors - so notably, they tend to have articles that are high quality to begin with and thus easier to review. Reviewing a newer editor's GAN is often far more difficult, because they aren't used to all the inns and outs yet - this takes an entirely separate skillset from reviewing an Epicgenius or Chiswick GAN (namely, that only an experienced reviewer would be as good at it!) I really don't looking at reducing the backlog as a numbers game is beneficial; what's important is getting articles reviewed in timely manner, which I don't think the "power users"' GAs are contributing to.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
02:46, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, generally an experienced editor's work is easier to review, given that the length and complexity of the article are the same. But by sheer volume, one experienced editor with lots of noms, myself included, is going to squeeze out those newer nominators who need the most attention. And like I said above, reviewing those nominations would be incentivized relative to an experienced nominator, as newer nominators wouldn't immediately have another nom ready to go. It's not a numbers game, it's about weight, and it would be fewer articles at a time being reviewed more quickly than a whole block of them being reviewed slowly.
And to approach from the other angle, I believe we should more readily (quick)fail nominations that aren't ready for GAN. It shouldn't just be "is it far from the criteria" but whether it fails the criteria in a way that puts an undue burden on a reviewer. These are ones that probably shouldn't have been nominated anyway, but they take up a disproportionate amount of reviewer time. When nominations aren't ready, we can direct editors to peer review, GOCE, the Teahouse, help pages, or wherever depending on where its weaknesses are. I'd say a limit on max noms plus holding nominators accountable for making sure nominations are ready is the best combo. We could get nominations in and out much more quickly that way while using GAN as a lightweight quality assurance/verification process instead of as Peer Review 2.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
03:44, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Unfortunately, the trend has been to increase GA standards rather than to accept that GAs aren't expected to be perfect (and that no article is, honestly). I doubt we'll secure any kind of consensus for returning GA to the lightweight process it was written as. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)04:29, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Given how little oversight there is, there's really nothing stopping individual reviewers from deciding how strict or lenient they want to be with the criteria, with failing, or with how they think the process should work.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
04:37, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Generally I'd agree, except that people who are "caught" doing reviews that others find inadequate are regularly dragged here and castigated. And when mistakes are caught in a GA that passed, reviewers catch flak for it.
On the other hand, people don't like being the "bad guy" and failing articles that aren't ready, so we give infinite time and chances for articles that frankly aren't up to snuff. Some noms will get upset that you failed their article, and nobody likes being on the other end of that conflict.
Basically, there's a competing social pressure to be incredibly thorough yet infinitely forgiving. Reviewers can't win, they get discouraged, and difficult articles sit around for ages. We need to change the culture around GA reviewing if we ever want to make a meaningful change in the backlog. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)04:54, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Honestly, I'd be willing to strike out everything I said above and go in the opposite direction. We could just as easily say it's a free for all on nominating but then be more firm with reviewing and quickfailing so weak noms don't bog us down. I'm actually more inclined toward that than a hard cap, except right now there's no consistency in reviews, and of course many nominators feel entitled to a pass. I personally am willing to be the one to say "this isn't ready for nomination" (and I have been trying to look for those nominations lately), but like you said, it needs to be part of a broader cultural change.
I'm going off on a slight tangent now, but I believe there are more sub-standard reviews that slip through the cracks than ones that get "caught". I watch many of them go by feeling like my hands are tied because there's also a stigma against accusing people of doing bad reviews, and it's gotten to the point where I just ignore them unless they start reviewing one of mine, in which case I ask them to return it.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
12:34, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I prefer to review the new nominators, starting with the ones who have done reviews, which usually means a higher failure rate and slower reviews for the passes because they are learning. I do this because I believe in encouraging a good review/nomination ratio, but another benefit is that it is an opportunity to teach those nominators how a good review should look.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
13:12, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I strongly disagree there is a stigma against accusing people of doing bad reviews. People do it on this talk page regularly, and the prospect of being publicly shamed creates a chilling effect for new reviewers.
I do want to point out the contradiction between suggesting that we use "GAN as a lightweight quality assurance/verification process" and saying reviewers should basically review how they want, but then bringing up "sub-standard reviews". We can't have speed and perfection. Either we accept that the process is supposed to be lightweight and allow reviews to be lightweight, or we keep tightening the screws and watch the backlog climb. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)14:12, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm probably part of the problem -- I can't really do "lightweight" reviews. I personally want peer reviews and suggestions to improve my articles much more than I care about another green plus, and so my reviews tend to be in depth and address more than the GA criteria. And nobody calls me out on this, even for monstrosities like
Talk:Chinese characters/GA1. I am not sure whether dedicated coordinators who look at every review for some quality assurance would help or harm, but this might be worth brainstorming about. —
Kusma (
talk)
09:49, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
I suspect coordination would start off at what we are de facto doing now in a haphazard and likely arbitrary manner, which is checking that reviews are 1) not checklists, 2) do source checks. I doubt it would crack down too much on being over-picky, especially as there is a lot of grey zone in the criteria.
CMD (
talk)
11:02, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
I think it's OK to point out issues that go beyond the GA criteria, so long as the nominator is clear that those comments don't need to be addressed to get the article to GA, and so long as there are not too many -- some nominators don't want to bring the article up to FA standards and shouldn't be asked to. But letting them know that a link is dead or MoS issues that are not in the GA criteria is fine, so long as they understand what's a GA comment and what is not.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
11:31, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Reducing the backlog by artificially throttling nominations does nothing to increase the rate of promotions of GAs. It is hiding the problem (we aren't getting enough GA reviews done and enough GAs promoted) by addressing the symptom of the problem rather than doing anything to improve the unwillingness of editors to do more reviews. We could decrease the backlog to zero by shutting down the whole GA process and cancelling all current nominations; do you think that would be an improvement? —
David Eppstein (
talk)
04:35, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
To the argument that limiting noms only hides the full backlog, it's about how the noms are weighted. Right now, these "power users" make up half the backlog despite being a minority of the total nominators. This is unfair to the people who wait months longer in line just so we can double, triple, quadruple dip. – Right there in the original post you're replying to.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
04:38, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
There is no line. Nobody requires review be done chronologically. Nobody will yell at your reviewer and you if your nomination attracts enough interest to get reviewed quickly. And we tried prioritizing frequent reviewers and new participants instead of listing nominations chronologically; it didn't help. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
04:55, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm inclined to agree with David Eppstein here. When we tried to push first-time nominators and frequent reviewers to the front of the line, it just increased the number of GANs that had been sitting in the queue for six months or longer.I think the issue here is that the review process is still fairly daunting. No one wants to be yelled at for looking at an article, determining that there are no (or very few) problems, and then quick-passing the article. Conversely, no one wants to be yelled at for looking at an article, seeing that it's riddled with problems, and then quick-failing the article. Quick-passing and quick-failing articles are both seen as problematic, even though there's nothing wrong with the latter. Therefore, many reviewers find themselves having to conduct intensive reviews, which means that fairly long articles are often skipped over by all except the most experienced reviewers. Many of these long articles come from power editors, which may be why it seems like the power editors are dominating the GAN queue. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
14:26, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm not going to suggest a return to the old sort order (though I did prefer it), but I think it's wrong to say that "all it did was increase the age of the oldest GANs". That's exactly what you would expect from reducing the importance of age in the GAN sort order. It doesn't mean the old sort order achieved anything else, but neither is it evidence that it didn't make a difference.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
14:30, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I meant to say that the change in sort order increased wait times for nominators near the bottom of the list. Currently, the newest nominations are near the bottom of each section, and the oldest nominations are near the top. Back when we were using the other sort order, we were grouping the nominations by username, so users near the bottom of the list saw their wait times increase. Granted, the other sort order did help decrease wait times for first-time nominators, but I think that came at the expense of everyone else, which is what I was getting at. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
14:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Wasn't that the point? If the sort order was causing those with better review ratios to have their wait times decreased (new submitters having a perfect ratio), then the system was achieving what it was meant to do.
CMD (
talk)
17:39, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Yeah, in that respect, it was working as intended (i.e. people with better review-to-nomination ratios didn't have to wait as long).I was trying to make the point that reviewers' limited time was diverted to people who have a lot of reviews and relatively few or no GAs. If someone was a prolific reviewer but an even more prolific nominator, they would be disadvantaged; e.g. if they had 100 reviews and 200 nominations, they were pushed further down the review queue than someone with 100 reviews and 10 nominations. Power users are more likely to have dozens or hundreds of GAs, so under the old sort order, they would be inherently disadvantaged because of the raw numbers of GAs that they had (unless they conducted even more reviews to make up for this). Perhaps it may be a good idea to consider formatting the GAN lists as sortable tables. That way, reviewers could decide on whether to review nominations by people with better review-to-nomination ratios. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
18:23, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Quickfails are not problematic in the slightest, as long as the reasoning is there. The difficulty is merely in the length of the average review. When people say "I'm not good at reviewing", what they actually mean is "I find reviewing tediously boring and don't want to do it", which is perfectly understandable.To prevent
WP:DCGAR happening again, we have decided that quality reviews must be directly enforced through the
GA criteria. Now, each review must go over the prose, images, sourcing, and do a source spotcheck. At FAC, this is handled by multiple people, and the source spotcheck is not needed after the first successful nomination. We have got ourselves into a situation where the "lightweight review process" is multiple times more onerous than the heavyweight process.Is there a better way? After DCGAR, I remember that
SandyGeorgia was encouraging the institution of GAN coordinators who would check reviews, as the FAC coordinators do. I think that option, in combination with lowering GACR standards, could help encourage reviewing—but only, of course, if editors with high nomination/review ratios want to pick up their own slack.
~~ AirshipJungleman29 (
talk)
15:05, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
I agree, quickfails should not be problematic if done correctly. However, I noticed that nominators sometimes challenge GAN quickfails even if the reviewer has done everything correctly, e.g.
this thread from a few days ago. I was trying to make the point that some reviewers may be afraid to quickfail articles because they fear being confronted by the nominator; sorry if that isn't clear. –
Epicgenius (
talk)
15:32, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Indeed, and not even just quick fails, but any fail that takes less than a day or two. There are a couple of noms I've had on my mind for awhile that have been submitted with eg. unsourced sections, but the idea of pulling them out and failing them feels like more effort than it is worth.
CMD (
talk)
17:41, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Some thoughts generally agree with the above discussion that throttling noms doesn't solve the problem, that being stricter on reviews (i.e. quick failing) may push people to improve the quality more before nomming and that having a backlog in and of itself isn't necessarily a bad thing. My own reflections on the challenges of
WP:GAN come down to a lack of incentive for reviewing articles. When I started nomination articles at
WP:GAN, I told myself that I would keep a 2-to-1 ratio of reviews versus my own GAs. I did that mostly out of fear of being ostracized by the community for not reciprocating.
WP:DYK and
WP:FLC provide good examples of the extremes (where
WP:GAN is in the middle). DYK requires QPQ, increasing the QPQ requirements for frequent DYK users during backlogs.
WP:FLC on the other hand, limits you to one active nomination at a time (allowing for a second nom after your first has substantial support). I would argue that neither process is running very well, with backlogs or lack of reviews still being a challenge.
I think the most important thing to remember is that the purpose of recognition is to incentivize and encourage content creation. So long as
WP:GA encourages me and others to create fairly well-written articles, it's doing its job. To conclude on that point, I wouldn't support any changes that would limit the incentive for users (especially users who create a lot of good content) to keep writing. That little green icon will get up there at some point, it really doesn't matter when though. « Gonzo fan2007(talk) @ 15:07, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
After reading the replies, I can say that I'm back in the "I don't know" camp, but at least we got a discussion going! I'm sympathetic to PMC's point above, and others that have expressed similar thoughts, that it's more of a cultural issue than anything that can be directly solved by fiddling with how we organize nominations. But it just happens that most of the people close to GA's "culture" monitor and participate in this talk page, so this is where any concentrated change would happen. Personally I've been trying to be more open to failing nominations that weren't ready to be nominated.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
18:36, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Replying to myself so I can think aloud and express general thoughts. My takeaway here is that consensus is against limiting our own nominations as a means to reduce the backlog, and instead we should be more willing to fail nominations if they're not ready for a GAN review. Maybe we should be a little more firm with nominators who make a scene about reviewers who fail a nom, in the same way that we're being more firm with nominators who make a scene about inadequate reviews. I still don't love that the most active content writers have such a disproportionate number of nominations, but good points have been raised about other factors at play there. At the end of the day, like
SusunW said, there's really no way to incentivize reviewing for someone whose focus on Wikipedia isn't reviewing and trying to do this can be counterproductive. And like I've said before, GAN reviewing is harder than other reviews because all of the pressure is on the one reviewer, even if they're better at reviewing some aspects than others (looking at you, source reviews).
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
01:40, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
My answer to this problem has been the same for a while now: I don't review nominations of those who refuse to meaningfully contribute to reviewing (and have a decent number of GAs, I'm not punishing people doing their first ever nomination). But when I see someone with 50 GAs and 0 reviews, I cannot in good conscience ever take up one of their nominations. I work hard to keep my review/GA ratio close to 1, so I'm not expecting anyone to do something I wouldn't do myself. We need a cultural shift towards this mindset, in my opinion (and some will disagree with me, which is their right). We also have the age-old problem of how to incentivize reviewers, which many brighter than I have tried to solve. I think large numbers of open nominations are in part a symptom of these known issues, excluding the (thankfully rare) bad actor nominating crappy articles en masse (and I'm sure some of you know exactly who I am referring to). Bottom line - when I see people argue so strongly against any reform yet refuse to do any reviews themselves, I really have no sympathy for them. If you don't want to do reviews, fine, but don't expect others to prioritize your nominations.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
18:52, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
been watching this conversation quietly - completely agree with the above that this is a cultural problem that really needs a broader informal shift rather than acute reforms addressing only the symptoms. ...
sawyer * he/they *
talk01:08, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Comment – Every time these discussions come up I am less inclined to participate in the GA process, if I am being honest. I find the pressure to review more articles disheartening. Encouraging reviews is fine, reforming the processes is good too, but discouraging writing and limiting collaboration for improving articles is counter-productive. The entire point of GA, IMO, is improving article quality, but if all we are to do is focus on pushing reviews through, the processes begins to focus more on quantity, which to my mind is how we end up with so many poorly written articles to begin with. We are a very diverse community of volunteers. Not everyone's skill-sets are the same and assuming that we can all do the same tasks equally well fails to recognize our diversity. The constant chastisement of people who don't review more doesn't encourage people to participate, but in fact does the opposite, at least for me. (For the record, I have nominated only 1 GA all year (at the request of the reviewer). Although I have written articles that would benefit from collaboration, I have not nominated them, but forced myself instead to review other's work. I spent over a month helping an editor at peer review prepare their first FA nomination, reviewed 5 FA/GA nominations. Not big numbers to some people's standards, but that required a huge amount of effort for me, as my reviews are meticulous, and I am incapable of making them less so. I see no value in holding anyone to my standards, but rather think that all contributions which lead to a better encyclopedia are valuable.)
SusunW (
talk)
20:59, 17 June 2024 (UTC)
Generally I think we should try to be more positive about all contributors here. Perhaps we should celebrate reviewers more (COI alert: I tend to review more than I write) instead of looking down at non-reviewers (although it is a very human thing to do). I like reviewing
SusunW's biographies (and I really enjoy working with her) so I am sad there have been so few of them here recently.
I am very interested in seeing whether the
review circles idea can work as a (completely voluntary) way where people who are OK with doing some reviewing get their own nomination reviewed faster. If this becomes popular, people will have a choice: do a review to get your own nom reviewed very soon/put your nom on the pile with no questions asked about reviewing (and that means you may have to wait until the next backlog drive). —
Kusma (
talk)
09:32, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Thank you
Kusma I enjoy working with you too a lot. I am going to rip a bandaid off here and be vulnerable for a minute, but maybe it will help some people understand that reviewing is not simple for everyone. When I review I file, I tell myself, this time I am just going to read it, make comments, do a spot check and move on. But that never happens, ever. I read through the article. I start a 2nd read through and when I get to the first citation, I check it. I tell myself at the second citation to just accept it, but my brain says, what if it doesn't verify the information or has a copyvio? You have to sign-off that it's okay, so I check it. And this continues through every single citation. If I find an inconsistency, instead of just asking the question do you have a source that supports this?, I must know if there is a source. Or, I encounter something that the context is unclear. If a source is off-line do I AGF? Totally depends on whether other checks have had no problems. So I research (sometimes for hours) to find a reference that supports the data, provides context, or is accessible. Only if I cannot find a source do I just ask the question.
By this time, an entire day has passed and I am probably only 1/3 to 1/2 way through the article, so I post what I have from my notes to WP. I rewrite each query to make sure that what I am asking is clear and a suggestion, not a demand. I preview it and rewrite it again before I finally save it and move on. Day 2 and Day 3 are more of the same until I finally reach the end of the article, drained and exhausted. I hope that the nominator will take at least a day to respond to give me time to regroup. I review the responses as meticulously as I did the queries and finally make a decision on the outcome. Instead of feeling successful, my feeling is relief that it's over. And then I see a post on this page, admonishing people about not doing enough reviews and I force myself to do it again. The struggle is real, and it is hard. Howie Mandel once said I know my approach is not logical, but in spite of that I am compelled to do the illogical. That's me. We cannot assume we know why people don't do reviews, but we can change our approach to one which encourages people to do what they can. (And yes, I rewrote this 5 times.)
SusunW (
talk)
16:04, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Thanks for taking the time to write this out Susun. The work you have done over the years to improve articles on here has been amazing and very inspiring, it has always been a pleasure to read what you have written and to work with you not only on reviews but other projects too. It's heartbreaking to hear you have been so discouraged by these periodic discussions on reviews, and I apologise profusely if I have contributed to that discouragement. Discouraging others from doing such good work should never be what we aim to accomplish here, and it is not a good sign if we are going in that direction. I agree completely that we need to reevaluate how to encourage more reviews without discouraging nominations, and to be more holistically positive towards each other. --
Grnrchst (
talk)
19:40, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
Grnrchst we're all good. I honestly just wanted to offer a different perspective to remind everyone that we don't all have the same access and abilities. The internet has been a great bridge but its anonymous nature can also make us forget that there is a real human on the other side. I don't often speak of my struggles, but perhaps it can help us be more "holistically positive towards each other".
AirshipJungleman29 I am uncertain what you are saying, I do and have done GA reviews.
SusunW (
talk)
20:26, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
My two centimes: Since my foray into good article nominations, I have tried to maintain at least 2 reviews for each nomination. Not only do I enjoy reviewing articles, because it gives me a way to read in-depth on subjects that I normally wouldn't have spent more time on, but I also try to be a net contributor to cutting down the backlog. My frustrations with the ever-growing backlog has, at least in part, come from a selfishness on my part.
Off the top of my head, there are at least a couple dozen or so articles that I have written to (I think) a GA standard, but which I haven't nominated due to the length of time it takes for nominations to get reviewed. Often I'll end up finishing an article, having polished off its prose and gone through every source I have in a number of languages, but then I just don't end up nominating it because I already had a number of months-old pending nominations that I was anxious to get reviewed. I think the only time I have exceeded five open nominations is during the ongoing WiG edit-a-thon.
I seriously regret that I have let my frustration at this process bubble over into support for certain restrictions, so I can't rightly support TBUA's proposal, despite understanding where he's coming from. The reason I want the backlog to be reduced is so that we can get more articles nominated, not restrict incoming nominations and punish some of our best writers. I would like applaud GMH Melbourne's recent review circles initiative, which I think could be an excellent way forward with encouraging more reviews. Let's consider making more positive projects like this, rather than imposing negative restrictions. --
Grnrchst (
talk)
20:12, 18 June 2024 (UTC)
I have only seen the ping for me by the op of this thread. I am new to GA, so if I have made too many nominations, I can certainly take some off, and don't want to be disruptive. Given my nominations are in the niche area of climbing, I felt that I needed to give a range of noms to attract/tempt some interest from reviewers. Two of them have been given GA status (and a third is almost there), but I never considered that I would be able to do the reviewing, is that something that I am meant to be considering at this stage? thanks.
Aszx5000 (
talk)
21:50, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
Aszx5000, reviewing is entirely up to you, and I was just trying to open another discussion on how to get articles reviewed more quickly. Based on the discussion above, it seems that we're largely okay with lots of nominations at once (and personally I'm glad to see more niches showing up). If you're interested in reviewing other people's nominations but not sure where to start, you can make a post at the
mentorship page so someone can help you with your first review.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
22:07, 20 June 2024 (UTC)
Thanks @
Thebiguglyalien. I though I would have to have more GAs under my belt before doing reviews. Let me get through a few more as I am still learning new things, but would love to give it a try later, and will follow your steps. thanks.
Aszx5000 (
talk)
10:32, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
It looks like an article (with some incorporated list-like material) to me, without any obvious flaws of a type that would lead me to quickfail it. —
David Eppstein (
talk)
17:28, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, it's happening! I'd apologize for the short notice, but a July backlog drive has been on the backlog page since April, so instead I'll apologize for disappearing for most of May-June and not getting to this earlier.
The aim this time around is to encourage participation by people who haven't done many GA reviews before. Experienced reviewers are encouraged to assist newbie reviewers with their reviews - but if you want to ignore the theme and just bang out a bunch of GA reviews as usual, go right ahead. This format is obviously somewhat experimental, so if anyone has suggestions, please do suggest away. And if anyone else would like to volunteer as co-ordinator, so far it's just me by my lonesome and I'd love to have you. --
asilvering (
talk)
05:42, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Mike Christie, is it possible to get a list of all editors who have reviewed 1-4 GANs? A list of editors who have GAs but have never reviewed would also be really helpful. I have no idea how to generate either of these. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:25, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, for the first one, that's fine. Though if there's some way to restrict the list to only active accounts, that would be even more useful. For the second, yes, a restriction like that would be useful, though I'm not sure exactly where I'd draw the line. The last two years maybe? Or if there's a way to only get active accounts, that would be useful too. Define "active" however seems workable. My aim is to come up with a list of people who might be interested in participating in the backlog drive as a newbie reviewer. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:38, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Asilvering: I've never been a co-ordinator of a GAN backlog before, but I have participated in previous ones, so I'm interested. What and where could I help?
Vacant0 (
talk)
15:12, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Glad to have you! I'll add your name to the backlog drive page. While I'm at it, pinging @
Ganesha811 and @
Vaticidalprophet, who were also co-ords of the last one - are you folks interested?
The main part of the job is checking off reviews as editors post them as finished on the drive page - checking to make sure the reviews aren't seriously inadequate, and double-checking what additional points for length might be given, or if you think the review is so good you ought to give it a discretionary bonus point. Since this drive is specifically encouraging collaboration between newbie reviewers and more experienced reviewers, this will be a little (but only a little, I hope) more complicated than usual, since you'll also have to award a point to the assistant reviewer. I anticipate also that there will be more questions than usual and that we may need to assist with matching newbie reviewers with experienced ones.
Also, if you'd like to revise the barnstar awards list, that would be great! I just copied the one from the March backlog drive. But I think it would be nice to tailor it a bit - for example, we could have a barnstar for the editor who assisted with the highest number of reviews, some kind of special "thanks for joining" barnstar for newbies (I think there's a "promising newbie" barnstar somewhere?), or so on. I haven't put any further thought into it than that, so if you want to go ahead and rework the list, it's much appreciated, and all yours! --
asilvering (
talk)
18:33, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Considering that assistant reviewers will get one point per review, I could create a couple of barnstars (e.g. a 5 point one, a 10/12 point one, and the one that reviewed the highest amount of GANs). Or we could only stick with one barnstar for assistant reviewers.
The only barnstar that I could have found similar to "promising newbie" is {{The New Editor's Barnstar}}.
Hm too bad re: promising newbie. Since I imagine most GAN newbies will not actually be new editors. Whatever you find that you like, go for it.
This drive deliberately doesn't have points for reviewing really old articles, to keep the focus on bringing new people into GA reviewing. Earlier, when we discussed having multiple backlog drives as part of the broader discussions about what to do with the backlog, there were concerns about reviewer burn-out or reviewers holding off on doing reviews when there aren't backlog drives (since another one will be around the corner). So the idea is that the January drive is the "main" drive, the mid-year one is focused on recruitment, and the fall one addresses a specific portion of the backlog, to be determined closer to the date, depending on what looks like it needs the most help. --
asilvering (
talk)
19:46, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Before uploading anything, I'll send it first on Discord in case of possible corrections . I'll be busy tomorrow so expect barnstars to come during the weekend. Cheers,
Vacant0(
talk •
contribs)13:51, 27 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm happy to assist as a co-ordinator, but I do have some work travel in July which means I'd have to take on more of a background role - checking a few reviews where I can, not making any big decisions. If that's ok, feel free to add my name! —
Ganesha811 (
talk)
21:20, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Ganesha811, thanks for asking. I'm going to be away the first week; though I might be able to log on at night, it won't be as timely as usual. Another difficulty is that I would be required to make the second column the number of old nominations (90 days or more) rather than the number of unreviewed nominations (which we have always done before), per the general RfC that was held earlier in the year, so rather than just taking the number from the Reports page and adjusting back the hour), I'd have to do a more manual calculation. I'm not sure I'll have the time to deal with the extra work involved.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
00:10, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Hm, good point. And since we aren't targetting old noms specifically this time around, maybe we should rethink the progress list, at least for this drive. A running total of reviews opened/ended might be the way to go this time. I'm happy to do that one, since I tend to be around when a new day starts on UTC time. --
asilvering (
talk)
00:23, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
asilvering, I'm not sure how that would work with the current {{GAN changes}} template in terms of display. You may need to create your own table. But I would keep the total number of nominations as the first column, since that tracks how many are outstanding at the beginning of the drive, and all the way through to the end. Good luck! I'll sit this one out, then, unless you change your mind on how you want it to work.
BlueMoonset (
talk)
00:33, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Is a reviewer allowed to contribute to an article during the review?
While looking at a certain GAN nominee that needs a review (I have not decided yet whether to review it or not), I noticed that some of the statements in the article had dubious sourcing. I was able to find some sources that I felt were more reliable + had valuable information. I also noticed some translation errors; as the original language is a language I speak, I would be able to correct these translations. Would I as a reviewer be allowed to recommend these sources to the nominator + offer translation corrections? I understand that reviewers are not allowed to significantly contribute to the article before review.
Jaguarnik (
talk)
19:22, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
@
Jaguarnik, recommending sources is absolutely fine. It is always great when a GA reviewer's suggestions make an article substantially better. A problem only arises when you end up contributing so much to an article that you would have to review your own work; in such cases, best to ask for a second opinion. —
Kusma (
talk)
19:31, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
(ec)You can certainly make suggestions to the nominator, and to be honest for minor corrections (punctuation and typos for example) I would recommend making the changes yourself, since it takes longer to type out "you have mispelt 'supersede'" than it does to correct it. However, do be sure you're right when you make such changes. I have frequently made more extensive copy edits than that when I am confident that the nominator won't mind -- e.g. when the author clearly has English as their second language, but the article is well-researched and close to GA standard, I'll do some clean up editing. This is more of a judgement call. For the translation corrections you're suggesting, you might ask the nominator if they would mind if you just did the fixes yourself, in case they disagree with your translation. Few nominators will object. One circumstance in which I will not make changes myself is if the point at issue is something I suspect the nominator is unfamiliar with -- I'd rather they made the fix so they understand the issue. None of the above is required, and many reviewers won't change a single comma on the article they're reviewing, and that's fine too -- it's your call.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
19:37, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Grouping these here, if no further comments or consensus is reached I plan to implement these at the end of the month, before the backlog drive starts.
CMD (
talk)
01:02, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Video games
Wikipedia:Good articles/Video games is one of two long lv2 categories with no lv3 split (the other is
Lang & Lit), and one that feels it has a very obvious split: between the Video Games (and series) themselves, and everything else (provisionally I propose "Context and content"). Regarding the lower splits, the video games are currently divided into five-year blocks, some of which are getting very large. There's no clean split there, but if there is a desire to maintain the chronological split it could transition into two-year chunks for at least the 21st century, imitating
Music. The other large sections is "Video game characters", currently at 200. This seems a simple candidate from pulling out series, with the two obvious candidates being Pokémon (26) and Final Fantasy (at least 34, I think, it's a complicated series). 13:45, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
CMD (
talk)
13:45, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
Maybe break out some entire series into their own subcat? Eg you could put all Final Fantasy, Mario, Pokemon, etc grouped together (both games and game-adjacent articles). That seems more helpful to me than these huge by-half-decade chunks. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:23, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
Well that would invalidate my lv3 split, but I'm not in opposition. I have pulled out just the characters for now, which can be a start for pulling relevant articles out from the other subsections too. Pokémon is easy enough, the games all include the word Pokémon, Final Fantasy has a list at
Wikipedia:WikiProject Square Enix.
CMD (
talk)
14:31, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
I would go the other way on this - games should be listed strictly chronologically. Having some sorted by series, and some sorted by chronology, seems strange and "surprising" (in the bad sense) to me.
SnowFire (
talk)
17:37, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Do you have a better idea for how to separate them? The issue at hand here is that when the categories get super long, they should be subdivided. But the chronology sections are already divided in 5-year blocks. We could make the categories shorter by shortening that to 2-year blocks, I suppose, but I don't think that's likely to be helpful to anyone. --
asilvering (
talk)
02:53, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
An alternate lvl3 split could be "by date" and "by series", in that case. I do agree that your originally proposed lvl3 split is better than no lvl3 split at all. --
asilvering (
talk)
02:54, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Rail transport - time for some splitting?
In
Wikipedia:Good articles/Engineering and technology#Transport, we have 208 articles classified under "rail transport" and a whopping 243 articles under "Rail bridges, tunnels, and stations: United States". I think we should discuss breaking these into subcategories. Some ideas I have for breaking down the general rail transport category are "rail lines", "rail accidents and incidents", "rail companies", and "rapid transit/tram systems". Rail bridges, tunnels, and stations: United States could be divided into rapid transit stations and heavy rail stations, while we could add a "bridges, tunnels, and facilities" section to hold pretty much everything else, including freight facilities (I think the only one is
Northup Avenue Yard, my nomination).
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
22:48, 25 June 2024 (UTC)
Note the general rail transport category is basically an "others" group for all rail-related pages that don't fall within a subcategory. The proposed subcats make sense in the abstract, at a glance I can see a lot of incidents. Unsure if I'd cleanly split rail lines and rail systems, something encompassing systems and lines like it could pick up related articles like
Northern line extension to Battersea too? Can't at a glance figure out how many company article there are. Splitting stations from bridges, tunnels, and facilities also sounds sensible, to the point it raises the question of whether to split them entirely rather than just in the United States, but that doesn't mean the smaller action won't work.
CMD (
talk)
01:13, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
My thinking was I'd throw out some ideas and we as a community evaluate which make sense. A separate rail accidents and incidents section seems like a no-brainer to me, as does one for bridges, tunnels, and facilities. A lot of the U.S. articles on railroads cover both a company and the line(s) it operated in a single article, making them hard to split between lines vs. companies. We can always make more changes in the future.
Trainsandotherthings (
talk)
14:11, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
I've split the facilities etc. from the United States, a heavy/rapid station split will require more time and/or a subject matter expert. I looked at accidents and incidents quickly and only found 9 so left those alone for now. If splitting lines/companies/systems becomes a bit complex, perhaps splitting off just the United States here as well would be helpful.
CMD (
talk)
10:30, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Biology and medicine reviews
I was looking over the GAN's in the Biology and medicine category and noticed that 11 of these were started by
Wolverine XI, all within the span of five days (June 10th through 15th). I thought to bring this up here because I'm concerned that the quality of these reviews will suffer from the quantity that this user has taken on, which I think is more than evident in the fact that 8 of them haven't even been started yet. Some of these reviews have received no comments for two whole weeks since their inception.
While I commend their ambition, I don't think this practise is conducive to the standard of quality that the Good Article system should uphold. Perhaps something can be done about it?
The Morrison Man (
talk)
13:54, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm busy with another project (at the moment). I should have all these articles reviewed by Saturday. After that, I'm retiring from reviewing GANs. Reviews can take some time, so people should be patient.
WolverineXI(
talk to me)14:10, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
If you haven't really gotten started on some of those, you may want to CSD them so that another reviewer can pick them up. You don't need to rush yourself to get through them all this week. You can call this a learning experience and toss some back into the queue. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:43, 26 June 2024 (UTC)
It is Saturday (at least where I am): I can see that
Wolverine XI has managed to make comments on two of the open reviews, but the remainder appear to be blank. Wolverine XI, I would echo the concerns here that you may have taken on too much here: the reviews you have done (see e.g.
Talk:Enchylium polycarpon/GA2) are really a short list of isolated prose and content points rather than full reviews. In particular, we need some evidence of source checking, image review, copyvio checks and so on. In other places, the comments are so brief as to be of little help: writing "please write a proper measurement" against that are 5–7 x 1-1.5 μm doesn't really tell the nominator what is wrong or how to fix it. Similarly, I don't think the review on
Talk:Charles De Geer/GA1 really gave the nominator a fair go: the article looks very close to GA standard to me and I would have thought it an excellent candidate to get up to that status in the course of the review.
As the other commenters here have said, reviewing is a learning process and we always have to go through practice to get good at it, but it would be polite to delete those review pages so that others can take them on, or return to them once you have finished your active reviews more fully, if they are still un-taken. UndercoverClassicistT·
C16:13, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Since Wolverine XI seems not to understand the issue and is still editing without addressing the concerns here, I suggest the blank reviews be deleted. We may also wish to go over their completed reviews, as the ones they've worked on indicate that they don't totally understand how the review process works.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
02:26, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Request Help with Abrupt GA Delist at Florida State University (Main article)
We are 3 days within the 7 days to contest an abrupt GA delist, so I am requesting additional editors and assistance today to resolve this delist while I simultaneously try to persuade the delisting editor to reverse their action. Another editor and I were in the middle of an appropriate GAR of the Florida State University main article. The cooperating editor and I were waiting for a subject matter expert to weigh into non-free materials assessment. All other matters were style and minor. A third editor enters and without establishing collaboration or consenus and abrupting delists the article, which has had GA status for years. Kindly help me resolve this matter.
Sirberus (
talk)
17:32, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
The GAR was closed after two weeks of no activity on the reassessment page, and a week of no edits to the article, with copyright issues still unresolved. Closing the reassessment as delist in this situation does not seem problematic to me. That said, the reassessment has now been reopened – is there anything else that needs to be done here?
Caeciliusinhorto (
talk)
18:25, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
There are some long-outstanding review pages that don't have any real activity on them at all. Normally, another editor will come in and check up on them, and eventually they get CSD'd when there's no response from the reviewer.
Here is one where
Thebiguglyalien just came through to do just that. But in the interests of not dragging out this procedure unnecessarily, could we perhaps institute a general guideline for when we should simply nominate these for CSD without further discussion? How about one month? To be clear, I'm talking only about reviews that have not been started at all, beyond the usual "I'll take this review" opening comment. --
asilvering (
talk)
00:47, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I took a page from
BlueMoonset's book (as it's mostly just them doing it) and nudged some of the inactive reviews, but I didn't give more specific instructions specifically because we don't have an agreed upon procedure like this. Anything like this should also apply where the reviewer has set up a template or headings but didn't fill them in with a review. For the ones where there was activity, we might also consider talking about second opinions, because right now the second opinion system is kind of useless.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
01:01, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I didn't mean to imply you'd done anything out of the ordinary, I just grabbed that one as a good example of what I mean by a blank review. I'm just suggesting that we make a guideline to cut down on this extra "are you still here" "[silence]" "nominator, what do you want to do?" in the process. --
asilvering (
talk)
01:13, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I think having a general procedure to point to is a great idea. I'd suggest a week. If you open a review but make no comment in a week, the review can be closed and the nomination returned to the queue. No penalty or particular shame, it's just a politeness to the nominator, so that the nomination has the chance to be picked up by a reviewer who has the time to dedicate to the review at the moment.
Ajpolino (
talk)
01:15, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
My initial thought was that a week was much too short, but on reflection, automatically clearing out reviews that are still blank a week after they were opened would probably cut down on the number of reviews that get stretched out over several months. ==
asilvering (
talk)
01:19, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I'm hesitant to recommend deleting without nudging, and also feel a week after opening is a bit short. Reviews can take time, and that time might only be possible on weekends or similar. That said, a week after nudging seems pretty harmless. If there is a consensus that nudging is not required, I would recommend multiple weeks, maybe 3-4, for CSD. There should be no prejudice of course to the same reviewer restarting the review page if they come back to it.
CMD (
talk)
01:18, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I suppose I could be convinced so long as the response can just be a brief "I am working on this", although it still feels a short timeframe for a nudge. As a general thought, the same principles being discussed here should not only apply to empty reviews but to partial ones, just with a different resulting process (CSD for empty, archiving and resetting for partial except in the few circumstances 2O may be useful).
CMD (
talk)
01:23, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Hm, I deliberately restricted this thought to blank reviews only, since I think partial reviews should be handled on a more case-by-case basis. There are lots of reasons why a review might have stalled out. Reviews that are simply blank, however, are all basically the same "case". --
asilvering (
talk)
01:27, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Fair enough, I was thinking of past nudging of months-old reviews, but appreciate the value of maintaining a narrow proposal here.
CMD (
talk)
01:30, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
I like the idea of applying this to stalled reviews of any stripe (of course, as CMD said, we would archive rather than delete stalled partial reviews). The reviewer could always start the review again at any time. No one is being penalized. Asilvering's suggestion of one week til nudge, another week til close, sounds good to me. If the reviewer responds in any way that would reset the clock. The idea is just to return nominations to the queue if the reviewer truly doesn't have time to complete the review.
Ajpolino (
talk)
12:59, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Is there anything the bot could do that would help? E.g. a "stalled review" section at the end of the GAN page, listing open reviews with no edits for more than N days?
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
13:09, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, that would be excellent. In a perfect world, I assume we would want a blank review that gets removed (possibly even an incomplete "stalled review"?) to also be removed from the bot's count of an editor's GA reviews. Not a huge deal either way, of course.
Ajpolino (
talk)
21:07, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
If a review is deleted and another review is later done with the same page number, the prior review is no longer included in an editor's GA review count, though if the later review never happens the earlier one won't get removed from the stats. If the review is just marked as failed and the page number is incremented, the reviewer does get credit.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
21:17, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, no edits for more than n days would be helpful. If it could check "no edits to article OR to GA review page" that would probably be the most helpful way to list them. N = 7? No one's suggested a time shorter than 7 days for any of the hypotheticals we've been discussing. --
asilvering (
talk)
06:03, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Thinking about this some more, I'd like to get agreement on exactly what we'd want to see in a section called "Stalled reviews". Suppose the reviewer opens the review by posting a full review with their first edit -- that's not a stalled review, so is there a way to avoid including those? Some reviewers post an empty reviewing template as their first review; if they never edit it again that counts as stalled, but how could the bot tell those apart?
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
17:27, 29 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, but I think an automatic list is only going to be helpful if the entries mean that someone needs to look at the review. If the review were to be deleted, it would disappear from the list, but if the list includes reviews that aren't blank and aren't going to be deleted then it won't be possible to tell if someone has already taken action. I could remove anything from the list if someone else posts to that page -- i.e. someone not the nominator or reviewer. Would that work?
CMD, any thoughts? Since you were dubious below about the process to deal with non-blank stalled reviews.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
15:31, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
My first idea for the bot would be to place a talkpage reminders for reviews which were opened but have had no edits since. This would miss say a review where someone writes "Will get to this soon" and doesn't, but on the other hand it would have no false positives. I would not put a section on the GAN page itself, that feels a very public sort of reprimand. We already have
Wikipedia:Good article nominations/Report, which gives an indicator of what is stalled even if it doesn't state the time of last edit.
CMD (
talk)
16:02, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Oh, I don't think we should have automated talk page reminders for this! I thought we were talking about a line on the Report page you mention here. Reading back up, I see I misunderstood Mike Christie's initial comment, where he said "at the end of the GAN page". I don't think that's a good idea either - I was thinking about the Report page. --
asilvering (
talk)
17:57, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Actually I did mean on the main GAN page, in a section at the end, but if it would be perceived as a reprimand I agree that might be a bad idea. The way the FAC nominations viewer does it is to have "Inactive for N days/weeks" after each entry. Something like that might be possible; it doesn't single anyone out. That would not be easy to convert into "I need to go look at this particular review", though.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
18:29, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
I do think it could be perceived as a reprimand. The Report page, less so, I think, since barely anyone uses it. I've gone through the longest-running open reviews before both this backlog drive and the last one, and found in most of the cases that no other uninvolved editor had popped in to check on the reviews. For that reason, I don't think it would lead to significantly more people being hassled if there was a "no edits for n days" listing on the report page. I do think that having that list on the report page would allow stalled reviews to be noticed much earlier than they are now, which seems to be a timeframe of at least a couple of months. --
asilvering (
talk)
18:36, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Sure. No need to CSD incomplete "stalled" reviews. They can just be closed and the nom returned to the queue. The same could be said of blank reviews of course. I don't have a strong preference on CSD vs. close-and-ignore for truly blank review pages.
Ajpolino (
talk)
21:04, 28 June 2024 (UTC)
Yes, I'm not talking about this kind of review. That's a complete review. It's a poor one, but it's complete, not blank. --
asilvering (
talk)
02:45, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
The current
Talk:Blackpink/GA1 was not the one that was the subject of a MfD, the MfD was about the previous version which was essentially blank. That said, it was an MfD complicated by a new user engaging in procedurally questionable actions rather that added to the page history, so that particular case is an outlier. (The current
Talk:Blackpink/GA1, being as you note poor but not empty, was invalidated and the counter incremented.)
CMD (
talk)
15:00, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Ah, I see. I suppose my confusion here is an argument in favour of not CSDing these pages... but I do strongly agree with you and jpxg in that discussion. --
asilvering (
talk)
18:18, 30 June 2024 (UTC)
Reviewing new nominators
We've had multiple discussions about whether nominations from editors with no GAs deserve to be reviewed earlier than other nominations, but I'd like to make a different case: reviewing nominations from these editors as soon as possible is beneficial for GAN.
I've done a lot of first-time-nominator reviewing, and my observations would include:
They are more likely to fail
They are more likely to be ill-prepared
The nominators are usually (but not always) enthusiastic about the process and keen to fix any issues
They also, more often than not, are clearly delighted by success in a way that those of us jaded by ten or more GAs have probably forgotten.
The two most important observations, though, are:
The first review is a great way to show them how a review should be done -- detailed spotchecks, verification of sources, no complaining about aspects of the MoS that aren't part of GACR, and -- a key point -- how communication works between the nominator and the reviewer.
The first promotion is the perfect time to encourage them to review. They've seen how reviews work, and they're successful so their skill is validated. If they've already done a review, I sometimes post a note on their talk page after promotion telling them that that's why I picked their GA to review, and saying we always need reviewers.
I think first-time nominators are the pool from which we should be hoping to draw the innumerable reviewers we need to keep GAN going. If you review first-time nominators, you will see more than your share of editors who (currently) lack the skills to put a GA-quality article together, but you'll also be helping to attract new reviewers, more effectively than any other method I can think of.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
22:17, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
User:CanonNi, I didn't know you had to get this checked. I looked over the review and it seems like you addressed all the salient points, and it looks like you took it seriously. I glanced over the article, and the parts I looked at had no obvious prose problems, they had secondary citations, etc. So at least at a cursory glance I don't see any trouble. Thanks,
Drmies (
talk)
12:36, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Drmies, for the purposes of the backlog drive, we're making sure that every newbie reviewer has some degree of oversight from a more experienced reviewer. If you'd like to help out with that part, I'd encourage you to sign up for the backlog drive! --
asilvering (
talk)
17:59, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
asilvering, haha, I thought it said "backlog drivel". I appreciate it but I'm way too random for that--although I did run into a GA problem here; see the section above. Thanks,
Drmies (
talk)
18:59, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
It is worth noting that these reviews are ineligible under the contest, which has specific recommendations for review length. I have dropped a note to the coordinators about making it more explicit.
CMD (
talk)
12:37, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
Talk:Giado concentration camp/GA1 doesn't hint to me that the so-called reviewer checked that any of the citations are of texts that actually say what they're presented as saying. Come to think of it, I don't see any evidence that the reviewer even read the article, let alone read a sample of what it appears to be based on. If I were the nominator, I'd take this "review" as an insult. --
Hoary (
talk)
12:48, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
I was very surprised at the speed and commentlessness of my two GA passes—I assumed it was an experienced editor, but the blockquote thing should have tipped me off. Let’s be light on this editor, whose profile indicates he is gen alpha, so around 14 years old at most. It’s easy to misunderstand how involved a GAR is supposed to be, for those who aren’t familiar. ꧁Zanahary꧂20:03, 1 July 2024 (UTC)
Age discrimination is not a helpful rectifying action here. We are meant to be non-bitey to all editors.
CMD (
talk)
01:18, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
I'm all for sweetness to every soul. Just, a 38 year-old might take his mess-up being discussed in a certain way very differently from a 14 year-old. ꧁Zanahary꧂02:22, 2 July 2024 (UTC)
Shouldn't it be a Featured list? I think it's still good shape-wise; I don't keep up with this show, so I don't know if it's up-to-date.
Spinixster(trout me!)10:14, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
The article seems to have been named "Characters of Smallville" when it was originally a GAN, which was fine then, but it later got moved in a RM to the current title. It should likely be either removed as a GA (as an ineligible list) or assessed for FL status.
Flemmish Nietzsche (
talk)
10:22, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
Off-topic, but boy does that Mando list badly need a revamp. The minor characters section is almost entirely unsourced. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)08:07, 4 July 2024 (UTC)
Concerns about a review: Taj Mahal
Hi! I want to bring to notice that the review done for
Taj Mahal seems to be done by a reviewer in a haste with the review not done as per all the GA criteria.
Background: The article was a GA for many years (2006-2021) and it was de-listed. The article has gone through multiple reviews (eight GA/FA/peer reviews/reassessments to be precise), with three previous assessments retaining it as a GA. The concerns raised in the previous review where it was de-listed (gallery, citation tags, expansion of certain sections), have been fairly addressed. The article is fairly expansive, was a GA and has gone through improvements to address the issues.
In the current review, the reviewer seems to have taken up a few random citations and has found contentious reasons (e.g. "It is not available in Google Books", "it is rather vague", "Author's meaning is different") for discrediting them, quickly failing the GA on the same. Ironically, some of these sources discredited are reliable, verifiable, and have been there for years through all these reviews.
As an editor, I would have been happy to provide clarifications if this was discussed and would work on improving the article if constructive comments have been provided. As comments provided previously have been addressed adequately, the current review adds little value as to what needs to be done. Would request clarity on the below points:
Book citations have been rejected simply because it is not accessible on Google Books or it requires paid access. As per
WP:CITEHOW and
WP:RS, onus is on providing the required details and not that the book should be available for free or in Google books, I presume. This is of concern as majority sources quoted here are journal sources with paid access and books. There has been no concern raised on this over the years through multiple assessments as well. I request for clarity on verifiability of books not accessible through Google Books and paid journals with respect to the GA.
While there are quick criteria for the failure of GA, in my opinion, the review has not done justice to the article and certainly is not a case for quick failure. Would request further comments or second opinion on this as to how to proceed. Thanks!
As co nominator, I agree with MM. The review seemed to have been done hastily for a former GA and former FAC. Also, it would be better for an experienced GA reviewer to take up an article like Taj. It is definitely not in a quick fail criteria and can always be improved upon. Thanks. —
The Herald (Benison) (
talk)
07:03, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
I gave a full reply on the review, but to me this is overstating the prominence of "inability to access sources" in the review, and it doesn't mention some fundamental issues with OR and failed verification.
Thebiguglyalien (
talk)
07:10, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Thebiguglyalien To me, your revert seem to be only justifying what has been done and does nothing to address any of the concerns. Please let me be clear here. The intention is to productively work on the comments/issues, so that it can be addressed and I do not want to simply waste our times in engaging in a fruitless dispute just for the sake of it with no real clarity at the end as to what to do. Whether it is a GA fail or a pass, a GA review should be fair enough to do justice to the editor(s), who put in effort and nominate the article. I will state in certain terms that this review at best throws some clarity requirements for a few statements and does not provide much to help in improving the article further.
Your comments also conveniently fail to sufficiently address any of the questions or clarifications raised here. So it would be helpful if these are addressed point by point. I am repeating this, as this was the whole pointing of raising this here as this would again help in getting clarity on these issues, so that they can be worked upon.
1. It has not addressed the basic question of why book/journal sources were simply considered not verifiable because somebody was not able to access it. Shouldn't a clarification be sought from the editor in the first place? Are book sources not available in Google Books prohibited as per
WP:RS? Does the GA criteria say that if the source is not available in Google Books or requires a subscription, it has to be considered unverifiable and quick failed?
2. There was no comprehensive review on all the criteria. The page has gone through iterations and if it is quick failed with few suspect comments (which in my opinion is nowhere close to the criteria for quick fail), another reviewer might do the same for another paragraph and GA reviews will roll on forever. Unless there is a comprehensive review with comments and some kind of consistency, I do not see a point of having a GA framework.
3. In my opinion, for vague or rather unclear statements, an editor's response has to be sought. It might at best be a minor edit if there is a disagreement and the entire statement does not certainly become unverifiable because the interpretation of particular word(s) were different (your answer to one of these issues seem to be suggesting exact copyvio from the source).
As a last request, let me know from your experience as to what should be done as an editor here based on the comments, so that I will proceed accordingly with the page concerned.
1. Books and journals do not have to be accessible to the reviewer as you state (although the nominator should be familiar with them).2. There does not have to be a comprehensive review of all criteria if there are sufficient issues identified for any one part. It is not expected that as part of the process significant issues will be found and given time to be addressed, articles should be as ready as possible before nomination.3. I am not sure what this is asking, but disagreements can be handled by discussion.What should be done as an editor is to edit the article in question and ensure the sources back up the information they are citing. From the examples provided, there are improvements that can be made in this regard.
CMD (
talk)
09:11, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
Hi, as reviewer I've provided answers to the points raised by Magentic Manifestations at
Talk:Taj Mahal/GA1#Response to Magentic Manifestations. I stand by my decision to quick-fail the article because the sample of six spot-checks clearly indicate the failure of citations to directly support material, as required by
WP:V. I therefore consider the article to be, per
WP:GAFAIL, a long way from meeting the requirements of criteria#2, which includes WP:V. The spot-checks have also revealed breaches of
WP:NOR and
WP:NPOV. Happy to discuss further.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
13:40, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
@
CMD, Thanks for giving clarity on the points. I do agree that there are clarifications needed + improvements that can be made and I am happy to do it. My whole point was that this could have been resolved through a simple discussion if the reviewer was willing to do it in the first place and it certainly did not satisfy the criteria for a quick fail (hence my request for a comprehensive review!).
@
AirshipJungleman29, I will sort these out and re-nominate it for a proper review.
The user
PearlyGigs is engaging in unnecessary and irrelevant discussions/mudslinging on the GA page, bringing out my past reviews/edits. This does not reek of someone who wants to engage on a constructive conversation.
@
PearlyGigs A discussion is what you ought to have done before. Request you to stop engaging in discussion not related to the subject at hand and not to go on a
WP:Witch hunt, which is against the basic rule of civility. Keep the discussion to the relevant subject at hand.
Magentic Manifestations (
talk)
16:06, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
Magentic Manifestations, I had walked away from this to concentrate on
Leon Leuty (GAN backlog) and
Charles the Bold (GOCE backlog). How you are handling a current GA review is entirely relevant to your criticisms of myself and
Thebiguglyalien in respect of
WP:GAFAIL and the way to use verification spot-checks, because it underlines your evident misunderstanding of the approved process.
As for "mudslinging", I think accusing me of feigning ignorance and suggesting that Thebiguglyalien endorses COPYVIO would qualify for that. Your being the victim of a witch hunt is rather an exaggeration considering that I have merely explained, albeit at length, my rationale for the GAFAIL, which includes noting that your objections indicate a failure to understand and comply with
WP:GAN/I#R3. Your approach to the Ken Anderson review seems to confirm this and I think it is a learning point for you. I am not interested in any of your "past reviews/edits". Ken Anderson is a current review, now on hold, and I'm sure you wouldn't want to pass it without getting confirmation that an offline source in your spot-check sample directly supports its material?
Perhaps, as you are obviously so offended by the failure of the
Taj Mahal review and so certain that I am entirely in the wrong, you should take your issues to
WP:ANI? I will be happy to discuss the matter there if you are not prepared to
WP:JUSTDROPIT.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
18:47, 3 July 2024 (UTC)
@
PearlyGigs How I handle my GA reviews is irrelevant to the GA review of the page discussed here. If there is an issue with such specific review, the respective nominator can address that and you are neither his/her voice nor the ultimate judge of things here. FYI, I have not failed the article for GA with dubious reasons for the sake of not spending enough time.
As for you cannot provide relevant reasons for the questions raised, you seem to be hell bent on dragging things irrelevant to the GA process at hand and proving that I am right. You seem to be offended as the issue was brought here and have added a larger retort bringing in a whole plethora of unnecessary jargon. As clarified by CMD here, try and understand the how the citations work and engage in a proper discussion next time, which could solve most of the issues and save time for everyone. Also, as two users have pointed out in the review page, try and familiarize yourself with the GA process by taking shorter, less traffic articles next time.
I have as such mentioned that the discussion on that particular GA is going nowhere and has dropped it. So please stay within the ambit of what is discussed and stay out of other discussions in which I am involved unless you have a due cause/constructive contribution or this is definitely going to go to ANI. Ciao!
Magentic Manifestations (
talk)
03:53, 4 July 2024 (UTC)
WP:DISENGAGE is one of the site's wiser policies. If anyone who reads this discussion should wish to ask me anything, or offer any useful advice, please go to my talk page. Thanks.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
09:24, 4 July 2024 (UTC)
2023 nominations
We're now half way through the year 2024, but there are still over a dozen nominations from 2023 that never got reviewed. If you're not sure what to work on, consider reviewing one of these:
The GA numbers are usually updated overnight, but there have been a couple of discrepancies recently so I just ran the update manually. The database now shows it as a pass, so the next time the GAN page updates your numbers should be up to date.
Mike Christie (
talk -
contribs -
library)
19:48, 6 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Broc and
Eiga-Kevin2: Hi, I was about to nominate this newly-promoted GA for
WP:DYK and found an interesting factoid in the Critical response subsection, until I spotted
close paraphrasing on a few texts in that section:
Article
Source
Tokyo-based film critic and journalist Mark Schilling wrote that Japanese critics frequently rebuke the films of writer-director Takashi Yamazaki, partly because "most are left-leaning" and view a few of his films, most notably the war drama The Eternal Zero (2013), as "nationalistic if not outright jingoistic". Schilling also mentioned that critic and historian Inuhiko Yomota was critical of Godzilla Minus One, calling it "dangerous".
Japanese critics, though, have long been hard on Yamazaki, one reason being that most are left-leaning and they see some of his films, especially his 2013 action drama “The Eternal Zero,” about WWII tokkōtai (kamikaze) pilots and based on a novel by rightist author Naoki Hyakuta, as nationalistic if not outright jingoistic.
Even “Godzilla Minus One,” in which a plucky band of civilians, including a disgraced former tokkōtai pilot, band together to save Japan from Godzilla, was called a “dangerous movie” by essayist and film historian Inuhiko Yomota in a Facebook post.
According to The Hollywood Reporter, American critics praised its drama, low-budgeted visual effects, and usage of kaiju as a metaphor for social commentary, with many favoring it over recent Hollywood productions.
U.S. critics have unanimously praised the film for the remarkable visual mileage Yamazaki got out of the project’s relatively small budget, as well as the story’s moving human drama and canonical use of the kaiju as a metaphor for social critique. [...] Godzilla Minus One seems to be earning especially favorable comparisons to Hollywood’s recent output of franchise sequels —
According to Dana Stevens, Ryunosuke Kamiki's performance is memorable because of his ability to convey the protagonist's vulnerability and emotional distress.
Kamiki’s anguished, vulnerable performance is one crucial part of what makes this protagonist so memorable,
Broc, were you able to examine thoroughly the prose for close paraphrasing issues? Because there could be more in this section and elsewhere. The examples above are just from English-language sources, I think the Japanese ones should be examined further. If it turned out that the article contains even more CLOP issues, then it may need to undergo a GA reassessment.
Nineteen Ninety-Four guy (
talk)
06:42, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Nineteen Ninety-Four guy thanks for pointing it out. I did run Earwig while doing the GA review and did not find major copyvio issues.
Regarding the close paraphrasing you pointed out here:
For the first sentence, I don't see the
substantial similarity between the left and right column. The article uses direct quotes when needed and provides attribution to the author in-text.
The other two sentences also provide clear attribution, in-text ("according to...") and with an in-line reference. However, I agree that they look rather similar to the original and could use direct quotes instead.
Per
WP:CLOP, Close paraphrasing without in-text attribution may constitute plagiarism however, in all three cases you raised there is clear in-text attribution. If these are the only copyright issues, I don't see the need for GA reassessment.
Broc (
talk)
08:16, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
@
Nineteen Ninety-Four guy all I did was reading the policy, don't consider me a copyright expert. If you think the issue needs expert judgment, please raise it at
WP:CP.
I did check a few Japanese sources as spot check; however, I don't speak Japanese myself, and the machine translation is often unreliable.
Broc (
talk)
09:02, 7 July 2024 (UTC)
Talk on chat board about quick passes by relatively new editor
There is an ongoing chat about a few GA reviews that basic contain no recommendations for improvements....quick flyby passes if you will. I thought I would bring this up in a neutral manor focused on content before someone else does so in a more aggressive tone towards this good faith editor. The tone in the chat is very aggressive as if there's something else going on. @
PearlyGigs:
Both the examples below do not seem egregious in passing of in my view....as in nothing outrageous outstanding.
Hi,
Moxy. Thanks for the ping. I'm not sure what you mean by a chat board, unless it's the Taj Mahal topic above. I'm happy to have any of my reviews reconsidered as long as the feedback is constructive. Thanks again.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
09:11, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
PearlyGigs, these reviews are shorter than we tend to see, hence why they may appear to be flyby passes, although they are not a checklist so they clear that bar. One issue in both is that a reviewer should not just say "no evidence of original research or copyright issues", they are required to specific what sources were spotchecked to determine this. One mentions that most sources were inaccessible, which is fine, but it does imply there were one or two which could be checked.
CMD (
talk)
10:40, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
Hi,
CMD. In the first four reviews I did, including Meligalas and Talbot, I wasn't sure about how to report the findings and I followed what I saw in other reviews. I did check some citations at the time but didn't record them because other people don't. After Mike did the Norman Hunter review for me, however, I realised that the spot-checks need to be itemised and I've been doing that since. In fact, I've just completed the sample at
Talk:Suleiman of Germiyan/GA1. Hope this is okay. Thanks.
PearlyGigs (
talk)
11:05, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
Spot checks are relatively new compared to other requirements, and so are still sometimes forgotten. That example is great, but note the spotchecks are also to check for plagiarism in addition to verification.
CMD (
talk)
11:52, 10 July 2024 (UTC)
I noticed that
Breonna Taylor just got nominated for GA and then quickpassed. Both users here are relatively new editors; those being
Nickscoby, the nominator, and
DeadlyRampage26, the reviewer.
Obviously, we need more GANs and GANs reviewers and I'm happy when new people get into it - but there's certain articles that need more care with the review, especially for controversial or complex subjects; and we need very experienced reviewers for a nominator's first time approaching a GA and vice versa. There is, notably, no evidence that there was a source spot check of any sort performed.
The article is certainly in a good shape for a topic like this, but I feel like this is one really need experienced folks to peer over before we can count this as a proper GA.
Generalissima (
talk) (it/she)
01:45, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
Oh OK I understand. I am new to this and was matching what I saw with the criteria but I think that if you think a more in depth review is required that does make sense
DeadlyRampage26 (
talk)
02:41, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
Hi
DeadlyRampage26, thanks for your review. I actually appreciated how you went through each criteria, the issue here is more interpretation than depth. On the source issue mentioned on your talkpage, there are a number of unsourced areas in the body (ie. not the
WP:LEAD), which we would generally pick up. Regarding what I mentioned above, GACR2 cannot be met without seeing if the sources do actually support the article and there isn't any copying. Now, it is definitely not necessary to go through and check every source, but reviewers should spot check a few to make sure. For example, the first sentence of Adult life is "In 2011, Taylor attended the University of Kentucky (Lexington) as a first-generation college student and returned to Louisville after one year", supported by
this source. That source does support attendance at the University of Kentucky in 2011, but does not seem to support the claim of being a first-generation student or a return to Louisville.
CMD (
talk)
02:57, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
I had been thinking about opening a discussion here as well. I think the process has gotten off to a great start: 12 nominees received reviews in the past month as part of the three "test runs". I support integrating it into the wider GAN process and adding links to it where relevant. As for additional coordinators,
PCN02WPS has shown some interest on the talk page. —
TechnoSquirrel69 (
sigh)
15:28, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
I'd also support integration into the GAN process as a whole. I'm happy to hop on as another coordinator to help ease things along if people are good with that. Might go ahead and start up another circle soon to keep the number of waiting articles on the lower side.
PCN02WPS (
talk |
contribs)
18:21, 17 July 2024 (UTC)
Important note
TheNuggeteer, the
WP:LEAD does not need its own sources. What is important for the lead is that it is a summary of the body (ie. not have anything significant that isn't in the body), the citations should appear in the body for said information.
CMD (
talk)
09:42, 18 July 2024 (UTC)
@
TheNuggeteer, that's two unnecessary fails you've done now in short order. Quickfails are really intended for articles that are badly beneath the GACR, not just articles that are merely imperfect. Significantly, articles are not expected to be comprehensive at the GA level, just "broad". You defend your fail of the above article by arguing that it's missing a section on campaigning, but it's not required to have this section (and doubly so if the sourcing doesn't support having such a section). I would recommend holding off and waiting for responses rather than failing nominations so quickly in the future. ♠
PMC♠
(talk)14:11, 18 July 2024 (UTC)