Hi Lourie
Yep, I'm with you. I think this is a great project, and - as you mentioned to me
offline - really accessible for people to take part in and contribute. Some cool ideas
also around it - we could organise an upload party where we could have a stall somewhere
(at a university or shopping centre on a certain day) where we could help people upload
their pics there and then.
I'm also happy to chat - maybe we could get together on skype even?
Kerryn
* * * *
Kerryn McKay
The African Commons Project
082 334 6165
skype: kerrynmac
twitter: kerrynmckay
On Thu, Feb 16, 2012 at 11:21 AM, Lourie Pieterse <louriepieterse(a)yahoo.com>
wrote:
Hello Maarten
It is nice hearing from you again! It sounds to me like a wonderful idea, and I am sure
that there will be some South Africans who would like to participate in this competition.
What do the others from Wikimedia ZA think? I would definitely be interested to meet up
with you and discuss the possibilities. When are you again in the Cape Town area?
Kind regards
Lourie
From: MADe <MADe(a)wikipedia.be>
To: wikimediaza(a)lists.wikimedia.org
Sent: Tuesday, February 14, 2012 9:23 AM
Subject: Re: [Wikimedia ZA] Pictures from Saturday's Xhosa Wiki Workshop
Hi all,
Very nice to see all the activities on the smaller South African language wikis!
Hopefully this means a start for those projects. I have another idea to get some more
things happening.
In Belgium I started the "Wiki Loves Monuments" competition. The goal for the
participants was to take a picture of a heritage site and to post them on Wikicommons. The
best images were selected and they could win a variety of prices (Belgium: iPad). It was
part of a bigger European contest (18 countries). The goal was to attract new contributors
to the wiki projects, and for Belgium to gather some wikipedians to start our own Belgian
wiki chapter.
The competition itself was fairly simple to organise. The European organisers provided
tools, a website, logos, a dedicated Wiki Commons upload tool, ... and also funding
(10,000 ZAR). We made the translations (Belgium alone: five languages), we searched for
our own jury, we searched for Belgian prices, and we got into contact with government
organisations that helped us with a venue for the price ceremony and some more practical
things.
The result was fantastic. 170.000 new images in Europe, of which 6000 in Belgium. Lots or
media attention for the competition. At least 50 (!) new Belgian members that started
working on Wikicommons or Wikipedia itself. A solid group of people that wanted to work on
our own chapter. We established good contacts with government organisations that suddenly
understood Wikipedia is not a black box but made by real people. Nice media coverage on
the competition.
The European competition will be organised in September of this year. They would really
enjoy SA to join in, and I'm sure WMF can help us with most of the funding. I think
this is an easy way to get the attention of new people, especially from poorer regions (if
we provide the necessary translations).
Who is interested to get more information, or to help with the organisation? We can meet
in Cape Town, Durban or Johannesburg (I'm almost everywhere for my current
job<338.gif>)
Grtz,
Maarten
BE: +32 475 21 38 35
ZA: +27 71 491 31 38
Skype: mdeneckere
2012/2/14 Douglas Scott <douglas.i.scott(a)gmail.com>
Hi,
Ian is absolutely right. Although the workshops them selves tend to create a number of
articles creating a community of dedicated editors for Xhosa language Wikipedia will be a
very big challenge that I think will take a long time. On the up side people are very
eager and interested but on the down side, as Ian has mentioned, there are still problems
with basic computer literacy and access to computers/internet. I suspect that it will
take a number of workshops followed by some sort of program such as one (and this is only
an idea right now) whereby teachers use Xhosa Wikipedia to test their students translating
abilities thereby creating a self perpetuating process that continually exposes new people
to editing that wiki.
As I mentioned to Ian on Saturday I think that a big part of creating a healthy community
of editors on Wikipedia is finding enough people with the right type of personality that
is at home using a computer. I think that is as much a numbers game as anything else
which means spending a long time exposing as many people as possible to the idea and
process of editing Wikipedia. A process that is made harder by relatively low rates of
computer literacy. But then again we must start from some where I suppose. Either way,
more work and support is needed and so long as I have free time and am in Cape Town I am
happy help.
P.S. Thanks for checking the stats Ian. To be frank I am delighted that one extra
substantial edit was made since the workshop on Saturday. That in its self is a 0.7%
increase! :-D
On 14 February 2012 00:02, Heather Ford <hfordsa(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Thank you so much, Ian. Appreciate it.
On Feb 13, 2012, at 1:15 PM, Ian Gilfillan wrote:
Great :)
I'd be really interested to know whether people continued to edit after the workshop
if you could share.
To try answer Heather, the article count went from 125, which
it has been stuck at since at least November 2011, to 131 during the class, and there has
only been one substantial edit from any of the participants on the weekend (a new article,
increasing the count to 132) since the workshop, so the answer seems to be no.
The workshop was 2 hours, and, briefly, we hoped to teach creating a user account,
creating or editing (via translation from English) an article, adding links, adding a
picture, and I wanted to add interwiki links to the list as well. Everyone created or
edited an article, and most, if not everyone, added links, though only some could create a
user account due to IP limits, and very few got to adding an image or interwiki links.
Douglas goes into more details in his post.
It's more complicated to add links in Xhosa than in English due to the way prefixes
are used in the language, so quite often an article may exist, but the link doesn't
point to it, and there are already duplicate articles for this reason.
There is still such a barrier with basic computer use, that I found a substantial portion
of the class was showing people how to maximize and minimize windows, how to open a new
tab or window, etc, and I got the sense that there wasn't always a real understanding
of why the various steps were being performed, which reduces the chances of them being
repeatable outside of the class.
The one article that was created afterwards is an orphan, with no incoming or outgoing
links.
There was a lot of enthusiasm, so hopefully having a followup quite soon will keep the
interest and momentum going, but I would expect there to be not much sustained activity as
a result of the workshop alone.
--
Ian Gilfillan
www.greenman.co.za
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