I'm reading your points with great interest, and I don't want to become this a
(literal) Encyclopedia selling. All the solutions (Klexikon, Vikidia, Wikimini,
Wikijunior, Txikipedia) are part of the same reasoning: we can't write an Encyclopedia
fitting all the readers at the same time. It's plainly impossible. And the trend for
Wikipedia is to be more and more thick, specialized and complex, not the opposite.
That's why children Encyclopedias are needed. Is not only about children writing, is
considering them readers who can't understand some articles not because of the
language used, but because the topic is explained for University level students and adult
public with some previous knowledge on the topic.
Our point for Txikipedia is only that children are using Wikipedia, teachers are using it
and their parents are using it. So making the effort in Vikidia or something like Klexikon
would be fine, but it is more difficult for them to discover, because they need an adul
that would tell them that it exists. And this is not so easy. When we launched Txikipedia
we wanted to use the momentum of Wikipedia to make it easier to discover. This may be
easier in an external website for large languages (where Google makes great), but for
small languages is more difficult, especially when most of the computers in the schools
are not configured in Basque (because Chromebooks aren't available in the language
students are using in their classroom). So having both entry points (Txikipedia directly
or Wikipedia in Basque and then Txikipedia) makes it easier. I don't know how much
visits Vikidia has, I hope they are millions, but we are quite happy with nearly half a
million visits year-to-date:
https://pageviews.wmcloud.org/massviews/?platform=all-access&agent=user…//eu.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kategoria:Txikipedia.
At the end of the day, we need to talk about the big picture: how are we, as wikimedians,
providing content for those who need it more and can't understand our great work.
Have a good solstice,
Galder
________________________________
From: Neurodivergent Netizen <idoh.idreamofhorses(a)gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2022 9:15 PM
To: Wikimedia Mailing List <wikimedia-l(a)lists.wikimedia.org>
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: Small joy of the day: Txikipedia
The English Wikipedia has a “plain language” wikipedia, the Simple English Wikipedia. It’s
targeted not only towards children, but also towards people who aren’t fluent in English
and/or have learning disabilities. A few “internet hack” memes say “If you can’t
understand the Wikipedia article, change en to simple!” Basically, the English Wikipedia
community has two very general-to-slightly-specialist encyclopedias.
Unfortunately, I’ve witnessed in years past that the Simple English Wikipedias’ activity
level was, shall we say, wanting. I hope that’s changed; I suspect kids would enjoy
learning to research for the purpose of writing on Simple before moving on to the
so-called “real” English Wikipedia, but that might require some assistance that might not
always exist offline. I think Simple would certainly be a good place to start making
Wikipedia more accessible to 8-10 year olds.
From,
I dream of horses
She/her
On Jun 23, 2022, at 11:40 AM, Mathias Damour
<mathias.damour@gmx.fr<mailto:mathias.damour@gmx.fr>> wrote:
Hi,
De: "WereSpielChequers"
<werespielchequers@gmail.com<mailto:werespielchequers@gmail.com>>
A childrens' encyclopaedia written for nine year olds would surely be very different
than one written for thirteen year olds. And content that parents of fourteen year olds
thought was age inappropriate in Alabama might be thought appropriate or even bowdlerised
by parents of ten year olds in London.
In other words, are you sure that one single childrens' encyclopaedia is the answer to
either the problem of reading age or age appropriate content?
There is one thing that is sure, that "one single childrens' encyclopaedia"
is a great step for children (and often teenagers and older people) than having just
Wikipedia available, and they love it.
Where I think that Wikipedia could and should change re this is in our use of jargon. To
my mind a "general interest" english language encyclopaedia should be written in
plain English. I suspect other language versions have similar issues. Perhaps if we
focussed more on this we would make it easier for those who wish to create childrens'
versions.
Yet there is not realistic hopes that the language of Wikipedia will change to be easier.
That wouldn't address the fact the articles on general subjects are among the longest
ones.
It sounds a bit weird that a content for 12 yo would not fit well for a 8 yo, and then
that Wikipedia could fit to children. The "reading level" of articles on Vikidia
is not perfectly homogenous, nor their developpment is. They can be usefull for adult
beginners on a subject just as a child can prefer Wikipedia on a subject he's fond of
and allready informed.
That was developped in this post (in english):
https://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Wikikids/Documentation_and_Vikidia
De: "Ziko van Dijk" <zvandijk@gmail.com><mailto:zvandijk@gmail.com>
Ideally, one would have
* an encyclopedia for the very young, that parents read to them,
* an encyclopedia for the 8 to 13 year olds, the target group for many
of the existing kids' wikis,
* an encyclopedia for juvelines, 14 to 18 years
* an encyclopedia for everyone; this is what "regular Wikipedia" should be,
* an encyclopedia for specialists; this is what "regular Wikipedia"
actually develops into.
And maybe encylopedias for people with specific challenges such as
dyslexia.
Most language don't have a single wiki encyclopedia for children or an
under-developped one. So I guess that's not realistic nor wise to wish such a division
in this work. So let's work on the allready allready launched ones ! (Especially the
one of the Vikidia family of course ;) see
https://www.vikidia.org/ )
You actually do not need millions of articles for a good encyclopedia, some thousand well
written articles are enough.
Vikidia in French and Wikikids in Dutch are by far the biggest wiki encyclopedias for
children, with about 35000 articles each. Yet young reader on the Vikidia's guestbook
still ask for "more content", which certainly mean both enought developped
articles (not just a few lines) and more subjects. So yes, we need, if not millions of
articles, at least several dozens of thousands articles.
Of course, we see that (as everywhere) 20 % of the articles make more than 80 % of the
pageviews. But you can't really guess in advance which subject will be in the top 20
%.
De: "Galder Gonzalez Larrañaga"
<galder158@hotmail.com<mailto:galder158@hotmail.com>>
About Txikipedia: the age range is 8-12, but is more 10-12 than 8-9. The problem is that
some of the writers are 8-9 years old, so their content is quite simple.
(...)
When I read French Vikidia I think that most of the contents are still too difficult for
8-9 years old students, but French education system maybe more advanced in some issues. Or
it might be that Vikidia is centered in 8-13 years old, and 13 years old readers are way
better reading and understanding texts. Klexikon seems very suitable, but it's
logical, since it is written by educators, and not children or whoever wants to write.
When we make courses with university students who will be the next primary school
teachers, they write longer articles, but not necessarily better. The main goal there is
to explain things as easily as possible, and not granting anything for known. We advise
them to write shorter sentences, without dependencies and to explain all technical
concepts inline, if possible. Also, they normally add boxes of "did you know?"
so they can add a layer for curious children.
Just as on Wikipedia, article don't have only one author. That makes them better, more
accessible and accurate.
You can't just test an average child to write on such a wiki to tell if children and
teenagers are able to participate to a wiki encyclopedia for several reasons :
* the 1% rule (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1%25_rule) fully apply there (or less
than 1%)
* regular editors are few but very motivated,
* they typically learn and are engaged for months and years, which is VERY different
than having been trained to edit for one or two hours.
A 12 yo with 2 years of participation, or a 15 yo with 3 years of experience are often
very valuables editors, either as writer of for maintenance and community tasks.
Adults as well have to learn to write on Vikidia, be they educators or not. Just as it is
well know that a journalist or a scientist, which are supposed to be skilled is writing
articles, often don't fit immediatly with the style that is expected on Wikipedia.
Mathias Damour
[[User:Astirmays]]
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