Sue Gardner wrote:
And 4) I believe there is general support for the notion of training Wikipedians to handle BLP issues well. I personally strongly believe that handling BLPs requires a set of specific skills and abilities – for example, an excellent understanding of core Wikipedia policies; experience with policies such as notability that are particularly important in BLP issues; diplomacy, kindness and patience. I am very interested in exploring further how the Foundation could support such training, and how it could be scaled up so everyone could access it. (I've been kicking around notions such as face-to-face training camps; training at Wikimania and the all-chapters meetings; the provision of support materials to chapters; monthly “train the trainer” webcast sessions, etc.)
I think one of the things that we've never done well at all is to actually teach people how to go about creating an encyclopedia, a dictionary, a textbook, a newspaper, and so on. We've only set up a space where people learn by doing, with one result being that we've privileged those who are autodidacts. The oft-noted inadequacy of our help documentation is a manifestation of this issue. Addressing usability challenges, as we're now doing, is one avenue to dealing with it, but I think content problems like this are another side of that underlying weakness.
Neutral point of view is an excellent concept, and helps keep Wikipedia from going off the rails in many respects. But some of the other concepts that have crept into our policies, like "notability" or "coatracks", while possibly useful in fending off various abuses, are really poor placeholders substituting for the fact that most of us lack training in the kind of writing and editing we're trying to do. So we end up borrowing approaches to writing from essays and research papers, which many of us do know how to do, and we do editing in the copyediting sense, but there are levels of writing and editing we have yet to reach.
I think training is a good idea. I think many regular contributors would be happy to get some training if they saw how it could help them contribute more effectively. I believe there is some portion of our audience with a similar willingness to support the projects, but who would only feel prepared to contribute if they got the training beforehand, instead of getting involved first and trained afterward. It appears to me that the community has not found its way to developing the training needed (not surprising if many of us do not have it). Which brings me to the questions that we need to answer: What kind of training is needed, how can the Wikimedia Foundation help assemble it, and what is the most effective way to disseminate it?
--Michael Snow