I'm in.  Just give me an idea of the structure that you have in mind and I'll get to organizing. 

-Aaron


On Wed, Apr 27, 2011 at 3:32 PM, Dario Taraborelli <dtaraborelli@wikimedia.org> wrote:
Hi Aaron,

nice work, thanks for getting this started – I suggest we use a short and accessible summary based on your draft as a landing page for all WMF research policy. We could then point readers to specific pages depending on the specific requirements of their research. I discussed with Erik some weeks ago the possibility of restructuring the research section on Meta and he suggested we could create a dedicated Research namespace on Meta which would allow better tracking of research policy documentation as well as have a dedicated search engine, if that makes sense to RCom members I'll go ahead and start restructuring contents in this direction. Someone recently complained that we don't have an RCom category and I'm all for making the documentation we produce more accessible and easy to navigate.

Dario
 
On Apr 27, 2011, at 12:33 PM, Aaron Halfaker wrote:

Hey folks,

Systems were down today so I managed to get a little bit of writing done.  I've worked up a draft of a guideline for on-wiki research (http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:EpochFail/On-wiki_research). 

I'm looking for feedback and/or edits.  I'm hoping to use this as a catalyst to restart discussions around research policy, recruitment and interfaces with Wikimedia communities.  The next thing on my plate is a rewrite of the Subject Recruitment Approvals Group.  I should have more on that soon.

Thanks,
-Aaron (EpochFail)
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