On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 11:02 AM, Nathan <nawrich(a)gmail.com> wrote:
As is evident in the selection criteria the
scholarship committee puts
forth, contributions on our wiki projects is the key component to receiving
a scholarship. The scores are so close, it is really difficult
(impossible?) to receive a scholarship from WMF without having
contributions on wiki. The committee also tries to look at someone's
contributions in relation to his/her local-wiki context. One specific
example of this is a former scholar from the Kyrgyz Wikipedia. On first
glance, it looked like her aggregate edit count was low, but on further
digging the committee realized she had only been editing for a year, and
was already a top 5 contributor on that wiki!
Just so I understand, are you saying that scholarship applicants are rated
based on a score, and that this score is primarily derived from edit count?
Applications are scored on different dimensions (see selection criteria),
and these scores are weighted. One score has to do explicitly participation
in WIkimedia projects, and this carries the biggest weight. Edit count is a
factor taken into consideration with participation.
--
*Jessie WildGrantmaking Learning & Evaluation *
*Wikimedia Foundation*
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