Task force/Recommendations/Community health 5
This is a recommendation as submitted by the community health task force. Please provide input and suggestions on Talk:Task force/Recommendations/Community health 5 |
Outline: tools for community health
- Question/Problem
New editors often don't know how to contribute, or where they might focus their efforts. Core editors seldom maintain heavy activity for more than 6-12 months, and often leave the project due to burnout.
- Strategy
Better tools can support experienced editors, and reduce the learning curve for new users.
Implementation
- Create "What You See Is What You Get" editing interface
- "WYSIWYG" for basic writing and formatting
- "WYSIWYG" for renaming (not "moving") an article.
- "WYSIWYG" for commonly-used templates, including citations.
- Make research easier to do
- A comprehensive list of reliable sources
- A web search engine that provides hits from this list of reliable sources
- Simplified citations, including "WYSIWYG", and a web parser that can automatically extract author/date/title/etc. from articles at major news sites (e.g.: CNN, BBC...)
- Improve support and feedback by facilitating requests and responses
- Allow "one button" requests for discussion and feedback, including peer review, second/third opinion, mergers, and deletions
- Create pages or "Wizards" that match users to suitable work (including requests for discussion) based on skills, interests, and Wikipedia experience
- Simplify and facilitate discussion
- Threaded-discussions with "WYSIWYG" interface and "comment box"
- Make it possible to leave a quick comment to a user without leaving a "recent changes" page (including article history, editor history, and watchlists)
- Allow "one button" requests for discussion and feedback, including peer review, second/third opinion, mergers, and deletions
- Make It Easier to Monitor and Maintain Changes
- Allow users to watch categories
- Allow users to create multiple or "tabbed" watch-lists
- Articles should directly display their current quality level and existing issues
Assertion: better tools can support both new and experienced editors
Sub assertion: experienced editors are experiencing burnout
Sub assertion: new volunteers take a significant time to integrate with a project
Sub assertion: there are barriers to contribution that can be reduced
Assertion: Tools should simplify editing, research, discussion, and maintenance
Sub assertion: "What You See Is What You Get" should be standard for most editing
Sub assertion: Tools should simplify research, reducing the learning curve for new editors, and providing support to experienced editors
Fact: Diverse volunteers are constantly aggregating reliable sources (sources with a reputation for fact-checking and peer review)
- Reliable sources notice and discussion board
- List of reliable sources in current science/technology
- List of reliable sources in news
- WikiProject Video Games list of reliable sources
- Anime and manga list of reliable sources
Quotes from Travis Kriplean study:
- Wikipedia "demonstrates a major shift in emphasis towards attribution work -- making sure that Wikipedia is a source of knowledge where facts are attributed to sources"
- "policy citations track global shifts in discursive and attribution work, suggesting that policies may be valuable as micro-level indicators of work activity"
- "[P]olicies relating to attribution are more frequently cited than policies in other categories"
Fact: Community practices indicate desire lines to encourage research
- Tools to search for sources included in Article for Deletion template
- Tools to search for sources included in Article Rescue template
- Tools to search for sources included in Biography template
Fact: Community practices indicate desire lines to simplify research and citation templates
Sub assertion: Tools should improve how Wikipedians request and respond to requests for help and discussion
Fact: Volunteers have stated they would contribute more if they knew where their efforts would be valued
Fact: Processes for requesting discussion/feedback are suboptimal
- Merging involves two articles, but puts the discussion only at one page
- Starting a deletion discussion is complicated
- Requesting a peer review is complicated
- All of the above processes involve multiple steps to initiate (tagging the article, creating the discussion location, etc.)
- None of the above processes are "WYSIWYG"
- None of the above processes are publicized
Sub assertion: Tools should simplify and encourage discussion
Quote from Jack Herrick interview:
- "If you go talk to our community members, you will hear about a family feeling: community, friendly, open, welcoming, pleasant place to collaborate. Our ratio of men to women is far more skewed towards normal than Wikipedia. Our % of admins who we can identify, 43% are female. And that’s the people who make it to the highest level of wikiHow."
Fact: WikiHow facilitates discussion by letting users leave messages without leaving "recent changes"
For further information and supporting materials, view Interface and tools for community health.