The idea for GLAM Boot Camp was first proposed and developed at GLAMcamp London last September, as some of you may remember. You can see our original notes from GLAMcamp here:
http://outreach.wikimedia.org/wiki/GLAM_Boot_Camp. The event we just held was
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:GLAM/Boot_Camp. The stated, ambitious goal of the first GLAM Boot Camp was to broaden the participation of the general Wikimedia community in GLAM-Wiki movement by inviting and training key Wikimedians I think that we were successful in taking a big step towards that goal. Another goal was to establish a model for future similar events, and I hope that as we work on our documentation, others will be able to use our experiences to guide them in making another GLAM Boot Camp elsewhere.
All of us who have been to events like GLAMcamps or Wikimanias know that oftentimes the most important thing is not the structured sessions, but just being with a group people for a couple of days and sharing perspectives—even over coffee or back at the hostel—so both of the main takeaways for me were about the attendees. The fact that we fully funding all attendees from across the US and Canada was integral to ensuring we were able to bring in fresh people. Second, we specifically invited the people we thought would be key, rather than hoping people would sign up. This ended up making even more sense in retrospect, because we were so happy with who came, but if the idea was to reach people who were not normally part of GLAM-Wiki projects, we were trying to reach people who wouldn't already be following our normal channels and who might not sign up even if they heard about it because for some reason they haven't already gotten involved whenever they have heard about GLAM-Wiki already. This also allowed us to try to get a diversity in terms of geography (especially folks in areas without chapters or meetups) and in people's types of on-wiki activities.
As co-organizer, I want to tease out a few more important points:
Attendees:
We
posted a list of attendees to the page; the names in green were those who we invited as full participants for the entire event. Of these, only about 3 had actually signed up or registered interest before we started inviting. For the others, I spent hours looking asking for opinions of others and looking through user contributions of people who had participated online in any GLAM WikiProjects, participated in meetups, or participated in any of various other Wikimedia activities or subcommunities, like administrators, featured content writers, Wikisource/Commons editors, Did You Know writers, WikiProject organizers, education program participants, and so on. Participants came from all over the US (New York, Maryland, LA, SF, Portland, Philadelphia, Kansas, Michigan, and Chicago) and Canada (Halifax, Vancouver, and Winnipeg), not one from the same metropolitan area, and most from areas without regular Wikipedia events. For more than one attendee, this was their first time at a Wikipedia event of any kind. The size of the group, 12 regular attendees with about 5 more at any given time with guests and organizers, was the perfect amount to allow for productive discussions.
Program:
We designed a program very unlike GLAMcamp, and a lot more both structured than a lot of Wikimedia unconference-type events are, but more practical than a traditional conference—it was something between a Wikipedia Academy and a campus ambassador training. You can see our program here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:GLAM/Boot_Camp#Program. We generally moved from presentation-heavy to discussion-heavy sessions. Generally, the first day was our high-level overview of and introduction to cultural institutions and the history and present circumstances of GLAM-Wiki. Michael's inspiring talk to lead off was really to give them an insider perspective of cultural institutions, and we talked a lot about institutional missions and how to connect the work of Wikimedia with that of cultural institutions. The second day we moved into more practical matters, going through the whole "lifecycle" of a Wikimedia project, and talking about specific events and projects. By the third day, we spent more time in discussion, and getting the boot campers to articulate their own visions of GLAM-Wiki, and how they personally could improve upon or contribute to it. We ended up having unplanned breakout sessions a couple of times because attendees were so exited ideas they had as we showed them things like our one-pager or the portal pages they wanted to actually have time to edit them. If you would like to dig into the etherpad notes from each day, they are listed at the top of the program.
Logistics:
The event was possible for us in the US because logistics and funding were largely handled by James Hare and Wikimedia DC. They funded us with approximately $8000 USD from their
2013 Outreach grant to the WMF, as well as covering group dinners and some incidental costs over budget from general funds. The large majority of the money (about $5500 out of $8500) went towards funding the travel and accommodations of attendees. All attendees were fully funded, and this was an essential characteristic of the event. Most of the travelers had their flights booked by WMDC and stayed in a hostel (same as used for Wikimania 2012 and GLAMcamp DC). WMDC also hosted two dinners and provided coffee/refreshments throughout the day.
Speakers:
The ambitiousness of the workshop, with three full days of programming, meant a lot of talking from Lori and I. We broke things up a little by inviting special speakers in certain topic areas, often where they had as much or more expertise as either of us did. Some of these speakers were locals from the DC area that agreed to come in, and some were attendees we invited to present to the group on something they are skilled at. Examples include the Wikisource and Commons workshops, a session on event planning, a session on grants and chapters. We also led off with special GLAM professional guests: David Ferriero gave a welcome and Michael Edson, who just got back from keynoting GLAM-Wiki London gave an epic talk for most of the first morning. At least half of the sessions were led by Lori or I, though, and future GLAM Boot Camps probably would want to find ways not to give so much work to two individuals, for their own sanity. ;-)
Venue:
The venue was provided by the U.S. National Archives, though there were pros and cons for this. The main pro was that there was no cost associated with securing a venue! We might have been able to find a room elsewhere without a cost, but 3 days, all day for no cost is a big ask. The other main benefit was that we were in a good location and were able to take advantage of having David Ferriero make appearances. We did face typical problems with working with a bureaucratic venue, like catering and security all taking more time than we wanted.
Outcomes:
For me, the most important outcome was seeing the attendees who were all *not* the same old faces as at every other GLAM-Wiki event come in excited and gradually take more ownership and responsibility for GLAM-Wiki, as they began to feel more empowered and a part of the effort. There were practical outcomes, like specific documentation or project pages to improve. More than that, though, most attendees came away intent on contacting local institutions or organizing their local Wikipedia community. I am as excited by the overall community-building I think we did around GLAM-Wiki, which will help it be more successful as it is more accepted and integrated with the Wikipedia community, as I am by any specific skills attendees may have learned or GLAM projects they may go off and start.
The need to reach out more to the Wikimedia community, as much as to cultural institutions, is something I feel very strongly about, so I am so glad we were able to hold this event, and grateful to everyone who made it possible and attended.
We'd love to hear your thoughts and questions.