> Pine, have you noticed how we're seeing fewer and
fewer well-qualified community members actively seeking out the
responsibility of various committee roles?
While I haven't looked at committees' member applications in some time, it wouldn't surprise me if a dwindling pool of highly qualified applicants is a problem. My understanding from the information that I see from WMF Analytics is that our population has somewhat plateaued. I've been thinking for awhile about how to address this problem, and while I think that there are ways of making incremental progress such as with the Wikipedia in Education Program and the engagement of more enthusiasts for particular subjects like cultural heritage or public health, I have yet to imagine a way to make significant progress. I'd be glad to have an off-list conversation with you about that subject.
> It's
because they are being bombarded, more and more, by unreasonable levels
of criticism. I can say this with a fair bit of authority because I've
been involved inhigh-profile committees, task forces, steering groups
and responsible
> roles for 8 years, and the level of criticism has
definitely affected where I'm willing to invest my volunteer efforts. I turn down 10 attempts to recruit me for various tasks for every one I
accept, and I'm not alone.
I don't volunteer for Arbcom for similar reasons: too much stress and conflict, and too little gratitude. WMF is working on some of the civility issues, but that's a long journey. Again, I'd be glad to have an off-list conversation about that sometime.
> The Wikimania Scholarship
Committee does work that will never satisfy everyone, and all of their
decisions will be found wanting by some segment of the community. It is
a very difficult job - there are so many factors to weigh that,
> even
though there are some basic minimal levels of activity expected,
deciding between a candidate with a few thousand edits who is one of the
most proliferate editors of a small wiki (e.g., the editor mainly
translates high-value articles
> and posts them in a single edit) against
one who specializes in high quality images (but only uploads 50 a year)
against one > who averages 15,000 edits but mainly works in
anti-vandalism, against one who has few on-wiki
> contributions but has
trained and educated dozens of very productive editors....well, you see
the challenge. These are all valuable contributors - but their
contribution to the movement is very different, and those who value some
of those
> contributions over others will find personal justification in
complaining about the decisions the committee makes.
> There
may be some reasonable arguments about providing some aggregate
information such as the number of applicants from different regions and
the percentage that were successful....but again, there are other routes
to Wikimania
> including scholarships from large chapters, which often
sponsor community members from other regions, and often select
recipients from the pool of WMF-sponsored scholarship applicants.