I definitely have the ability to present the material. I'd have to
find a day when I'm actually in the country, and schedule time to
prepare. If it's feasible to do this over a weekend, that would be
great, but I realize that it might be harder to find participants.
Please, everyone, work the peer pressure! I'm eager to get involved,
but I need a prod sometimes.
David
On Sat, Feb 25, 2012 at 12:04 AM, Asaf Bartov <abartov(a)wikimedia.org> wrote:
Hello, everyone.
I would like your input on an idea we at the Wikimedia Foundation have been
exploring as one possible model of outreach activity in South Africa: a
two-day "train the trainer" event in Pretoria for (mostly campus) librarians
from South Africa, to enable them to go back to their respective
institutions and communities and deliver two-hour and one-day talk and
workshops on Wikipedia. The training event would be funded by a grant from
the Wikimedia Foundation.
More details: the participants are to be carefully selected for good
existing computer literacy and relevant skills (but a Wikipedia background
won't be required), and the training event would include a balance of
"theory" (free knowledge, free licenses, NPOV), background ("How does
Wikipedia get written?"), user training (navigation, categories, Commons,
talk pages, portals, WikiProjects, ...), and basic editor training (user
accounts, basic markup, where to get help, how to interact on talk pages).
Ideally, the trainee-trainers would be able to deliver a two-hour
"introduction to Wikipedia" or "How to Make the Most of Wikipedia"
module,
and/or a one-day "Introduction to Editing on Wikipedia" workshop, in their
respective communities, as opportunity and conditions permit.
This specifically seeks to address a "bootstrapping" difficulty, i.e. the
short supply of Wikipedians available to deliver that sort of training. No
attempt will be made to make these trainers pose as veteran Wikipedians; the
focus is clearly to be along the lines of "Wikipedia is tremendously useful,
and we can share some useful information about it that would let you use it
more effectively and explore it further on your own".
We are looking into partnering with a Pretoria-based non-profit named ITOCA
-- Information Training and Outreach Centre for Africa -- which specializes
in conducting training events for librarians, teachers, and IT personnel in
sub-Saharan Africa. (Ms. Blessing Chataira of ITOCA is subscribed to this
list.) ITOCA can handle the logistics of holding this event -- recruiting
and selecting participants, booking and providing accommodations and
refreshments for the training event, preparing physical materials,
collecting feedback and providing follow-up with participants in their
respective communities after the event, etc. What ITOCA certainly cannot do
is _prepare and deliver_ such training. That would certainly require a
veteran Wikipedian!
I would therefore ask if any of you might be interested in working with the
WMF on designing the curriculum for such an event, and/or in delivering such
training, once a curriculum is available. The Wikimedia Foundation would
gladly cover travel expenses (i.e. Wikipedians outside Gauteng can certainly
help!) and provide a "per diem" budget for meals and incidentals.
I welcome feedback about the idea, whether or not you're able to help out.
Cheers,
Asaf
--
Asaf Bartov
Wikimedia Foundation
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