Laura Hale, 20/07/2013 11:05:
2) ask the question directly, "Why didn't
you edit/register? ...
x-1) Thought it was a male-only club, x) Oh, isn't Wikipedia a nerd
cabal?, x+1) Because Wikipedia feels like a WASP-only thing" etc.
This would require a lot of effort to come up with a good phrasing
to cover all "discrimination" feelings and to avoid
leading/loaded/biased questions which would skew results, but
doesn't sound impossible. (Profs in my university regularly do such
things for sexual harassment and other discrimination surveys in
order to assess the scale of the problem.)
This actually seems a bit backwards. Why not ask existing contributors
why they contribute?
Perhaps we're talking about different things, (2) was meant to be for
readers mainly, while (1) makes sense mainly for editors as the
readership demographics is supposedly less skewed (though one could want
to verify this).
The option would integrate easily enough with questions we've already
asked in the past:
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Research:Wikipedia_Readership_Survey_2011/Text#PARTICIPATION_LEVELS_AND_BARRIERS_.28EDITING_AND_DONATING.29>
D2, D7, D10...
Especially amongst targeted populations? Develop
strategies for recruitment and retention based around those answers? My
gut feeling is that a lot of the responses that would be listed in a
questionere are based around answers like those listed. My own
experience with getting female friends to edit has been more along the
lines of: 1) If I want to contribute to something, I want to either get
paid or get credit, 2) I do not see why I should bother to edit. What
is in it for me? This issue has actually come up much, much, much more
frequently for me than the issues of visual editors. I rarely see good
arguments that work towards intrinsic motivation as to why a person
should contribute. I'd love to see some good videos pitching why a
person should contribute to Wikipedia, Wikinews, Commons, Wiktionary,
Wikibooks, Wikivoyage, Wikispecies, Wikidata.
Sure, but this is already being done extensively, both by the
storytellers and by LCA on non-English communities (mentioned on the
annual plan,
<https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Talk:Wikimedia_budget#Other_2012-13_achievements>),
though probably not for most sister projects yet.
It's also unrelated on how to answer the original question of the thread.
Nemo