I really think we have a good opportunity to influence this behaviour by
using tools and UX, but as an aside, as Lodewijk and Galder have pointed
out, in addition to the technical challenges, it's also up to us as
Wikipedia editors how we handle what's lacking in articles written by
newcomers.
If we delete the article, we typically tell them why, but there's a huge
difference between moving an article to a user space and politely
explaining what's missing and deleting a text and making the explanation
sound more like a justification for our actions than as a helpful guide to
writing an encyclopedic article.
As a patroller, I'd be happy for people to just indicate sources in any way
– if that means they write out the title within brackets, fine, that's a
quick and easy fix and then we can thank them for their contribution and
explain how to do it the next time. But I also think we need to recognize
that as we've raised the bar for what's acceptable in the encyclopedia (as
most language versions do once they've accumulated the most necessary
encyclopedic content), it's not just become more difficult to write one's
first article, but also for patrollers to help newcomers. The time
investment necessary to help fix a stub without sources to what's
considered acceptable standard has grown considerably, and thus the same
level of desire to help a newcomer will lead to deletion more often in 2024
than in 2006.
Best,
//Johan Jönsson
--
Den lör 9 mars 2024 kl 16:15 skrev Natacha Rault <natacha(a)sans-pages.org>rg>:
Hi, indeed it is great news to know this new tool is
being tested.
What I have noticed is that new editors (speaking from workshop
experience) find it harder to find the source button since it is no long
written but equivalent to quotation mark => ? . To add a ref if they don?t
know where to do it from they need to virtually try clicking every button.
A lot of them also use external links by mistake (the buttons are so close
to one other it?s easy to make a mistake).
Kind regards,
Nattes
Envoy? de mon iPhone
Le 9 mars 2024 ? 03:25, effe iets anders <effeietsanders(a)gmail.com> a
?crit :
?
Thanks Benoit,
This sounds like a good step in the right direction. We'll need to try out
several of these approaches, but also improve our own documentation on
nl.wikipedia. My impression is that it is currently far too hard to add a
reference, to expect that this is done by most new contributors.
Do we know more about:
* How many new contributors know they should add a reference, e.g. when
writing a new article
* If they know that they should add a reference, how many know how to
recognize a good reference from a poor one
* How many new contributors, if they know that they should add a
reference, can figure out how to actually make this happen (assuming they
know the url already)
* Assuming that they can find the reference button, and know their URL, in
how many cases does the auto-convert feature work? (we could test this by
taking a random sample of reference URLs, and entering them in the
reference insertion tool)
These are not just technical problems - some of them are more about
awareness (we can focus for example a little less on copyright, and more on
other quality aspects) or good documentation (how to recognize a good
source?). I also suspect that these numbers might vary quite a bit across
communities/countries.
In my personal experience, it is hard to add references to articles even
if all the 'social' steps work smoothly (they often dont!). Maybe my sample
is biased, but it feels like I get much more often an error in nlwiki when
I try to convert a url to a citation, than in enwiki. Does anyone know if
this is indeed the case? Is anyone tracking statistics on this?
Best,
Lodewijk
On Wed, Mar 6, 2024 at 4:03?PM <bevellin(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
Hello
Some wikis have added the requirement to add citations at the edit
summary step. But it is clearly too late in the process, as users just want
to publish. Some users will add citations as a second step, but it might be
too late, as the edit has a great chance of being reverted meanwhile.
You might be interested in the Editing team's current project, Edit check
<https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Edit_check>.
This project aims to provide in-context help by checking on the edit. The
first iteration is "Reference Check": if a user adds a paragraph with zero
source, they are encouraged to add one. We are currently testing it at 22
Wikipedias, to verify if the prompt to add citations is not blocking users.
You can test it at your wiki using an URL parameter:
1. Edit any article in the main namespace using the VisualEditor.
2. Add &ecenable=1 to the URL in your browser. -- For example in Dutch,
as Romaine started the thread:
https://nl.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Zon&veaction=edit&ecenab…
3. Reload the page with the new URL.
4. Create a new paragraph, that is at least 50 characters long without
adding a citation
5. Press the Publish? Notice the prompt that appears
6. Test is completed, don't save your edit unless you know what you are
doing.
All edits are tagged, so that you can find them in Recent Changes or in
your Watchlist. If a user selects "no" after the prompt, they have to
select a reason why. That reason is tagged as well, easing experienced
users' work on patrolling and improving these edits.
We will soon add a message if the added citation is listed on
MediaWiki:Spam-blacklist or MediaWiki:BlockedExternalDomains.json.
As Edit Check only checks the first paragraph added, the next iteration
will be to add multi-Reference checks. We are currently working on the
design for multi-checks.
Of course, Edit Check is not limited to adding citations. We can imagine
other ways to close the tap. Your suggestions are welcomed, as are your
questions.
Thank you,
--
Beno?t Evellin - Trizek_(WMF) (he/him)
Community Relations Specialist
Wikimedia Foundation
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