Claudia,
I understand where you are coming from. But talking about the demographics
of WMF projects at the level of detail WMF is going now is somewhat newish.
Not talking about the disparity in the past did not fix the problem. So,
drawing attention to the issue seemed like a good idea. :-)
I tend to think that information is powerful in that it educates and
changes behavior.
If anyone has suggestions as to how to make the research and data analysis
better or just want a better understanding of how it is done, I encourage
you to talk to the people doing the research. I have done this in the past
and found them very approachable and more than willing to listen to ideas.
Sydney Poore
User:FloNight
On Mon, Jun 18, 2012 at 10:52 AM, <koltzenburg(a)w4w.net> wrote:
Sarah, thanks
I am focusing my energy on taking action versus
research investment.
fair enough,
the "versus" reads a little strange to me in this context but never mind
;-)
in my view of the matter, and my thanks to Laura for filling in with a few
concrete examples, taking positive
action in this context would mean, I guess, to stop talking about any
numbers that we might have to
consider to be harmful - precisely: harmful for swift and wonderful
encouragement for *positive* action
back to action, then
including research ;-)
Claudia
On Mon, 18 Jun 2012 07:36:10 -0700, Sarah Stierch wrote
Well, I'll be honest:
I don't really care about detailed research unless it shows our numbers
changing at this point :-) (better or worse)...
I am focusing my energy on taking action versus research investment. So
perhaps I shouldn't even bother with this conversation. We all know we
have few women editing :-/
Sar
Sent via iPhone - I apologize in advance for my shortness or errors! :)
On Jun 18, 2012, at 12:07 AM, koltzenburg(a)w4w.net wrote:
> Thank you, Sarah
>
>> Data doesn't equal patriarchy
>
> agree, I was not stipulating this, I am pointing to the philosophy
that feeds
into the setup of such an
inquiry
> in the first place
>
>> I trust the survey.
>
> up to you, Sarah
> which part of it do you trust? the outcome given the chosen setup?
> I have to reasons, either, for any doubt about the results
>
> my argument is to take a close look at the setup of any statistics
exercise
first and then ask, maybe,
who
> benefits most from the results, and then we
are well into
partiarchally inspired politics, I guess,
> anyway, this is the point I am trying to
make
>
> the task is, I think, to work on the following:
> which question would yield results that people on this list will feel
motivated by to turn into sustainable
> positive action about a perceived gender gap
among Wikipedia editors?
>
>> And having
>> numbers is honestly more powerful than saying "oh most editors are
men."
>
> well, given Risker/Anne's statement
>>>> (most editors do not gender-identify ...
>
> no one knows, right?
> so my argument says that since most editors do not gender-identify, it
would
be wrong to say anything,
> really
>
> and hence any study of "gender gap" in Wikipedia (or any other project
of its kind) had better rely on
other
> data than these - which is why I think that
in general such a
discussion of basics might be useful for
Laura's
> project, too - I'd say go for it, Laura
:-)
>
>> If you'd like to talk to the organizers of the survey, I'm sure
they'd be
>> happy to discuss it.
>
> thank you, yes, you were so kind as to give me the contact data last
time I
raised the issue here, for
which
> thanks again
>
> I'd be more happy to discuss the matter more thorougly here first
> - or maybe anyone knows of another public forum which might be
interested in
this topic?
>
>> Keep in mind the survey is people stating their gender in the survey
>> itself, not their userspace/account.
>
> indeed, agree,
> and this is precisely why any implicit claims on the relevance of the
results
should not be writ large in
our list
> description
>
> let us do away with looking at numbers first... as far as I can glean
from
discussions like the ones we do
on
> this list, there is quite ample data other
than numbers that allow us
to address the phenomenon of a
> perceived gender gap in Wikipedia et al. and
of course then take
positive action to remedy any
perceived
> imbalance
>
> best & cheers
> Claudia
>
> On Sun, 17 Jun 2012 23:35:14 -0700, Sarah Stierch wrote
>> Keep in mind the survey is people stating their gender in the survey
>> itself, not their userspace/account. When I take the survey I can
choose
a
>> gender or no response. (and maybe
something else..I dont remember and
I'm
>> on my phone..) I am sure plenty of
people who do not choose gender on
>> their profile choose it anonymously on the profile.
>>
>> I trust the survey. Data doesn't equal patriarchy when it is the
community
>> who is choosing to identify their gender
in said survey. And having
>> numbers is honestly more powerful than saying "oh most editors are
men."
>>
>> If you'd like to talk to the organizers of the survey, I'm sure
they'd be
>> happy to discuss it.
>>
>> Sarah
>>
>> Sent via iPhone - I apologize in advance for my shortness or errors!
:)
>>
>> On Jun 17, 2012, at 11:22 PM, koltzenburg(a)w4w.net wrote:
>>
>>> Thank you Risker/Anne
>>> for this statement which I think is true:
>>>
>>>> (most editors do not gender-identify ...
>>>
http://lists.wikimedia.org/pipermail/gendergap/2012-June/002876.html
>>>
>>> what follows from this is, in my opinion, that any specific-looking
numbers the Wikimedia Foundation
> (e.g.,
>>> Wikipedia editor survey) chooses to have published about how many
women act as editors should
not
> be
>>> trusted and hence not be perpetuated
>>>
>>> and best not in our list description, either...
>>> "The most recent Wikipedia editor survey indicates that the
percentage of female contributors in
> Wikimedia
>>> projects is approximately nine percent."
>>>
>>> could this starting sentence be changed, maybe, to reflect the fact
stated by Anne/Risker and not
feed
> into
>>> such a seemingly negatively perceived climate in the first place?
>>>
>>> ah, yes, this is me again, trying to raise some awareness also about
the promotional paradoxes in
> results
>>> created by patriarchally-inspired statistics exercises that purport
to come up with facts,
>>> apologies if this makes you groan,
maybe again,
>>> I will stick to my point though until I hear better arguments -
which, certainly, I am happy to take
on
this
> point
>
> :-) thanks & cheers,
> Claudia
> koltzenburg(a)w4w.net
>
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thanks & cheers,
Claudia
koltzenburg(a)w4w.net
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thanks & cheers,
Claudia
koltzenburg(a)w4w.net
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