I've posted an update on the state of the African language Wikipedias: http://www.greenman.co.za/blog/?p=953
Been some positive progress, although Xhosa in particular is disappointing after the three workshops.
hi ian, a very interesting post. are you able to somehow judge how prices influence participation, quality, and sustainability?
On Fri, Apr 13, 2012 at 23:16, Ian Gilfillan wikimediaza@greenman.co.za wrote:
I've posted an update on the state of the African language Wikipedias: http://www.greenman.co.za/blog/?p=953
Been some positive progress, although Xhosa in particular is disappointing after the three workshops.
-- Ian Gilfillan www.greenman.co.za
WikimediaZA mailing list WikimediaZA@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaza
Hi Ian,
Thanks for looking into this and writing this up, especially the part on the Xhosa language Wikipedia. It is a very interesting post and I agree that it is the case that the increase in the number of articles on Xhosa language Wikipedia has been disappointing after the workshops. I think that this will be a long term and on going project with the goal of finding that one or two people amongst X large number of people that has both the natural inclination to edit Wikipedia (which I think is a relatively rare trait) and the Xhosa language skills. As well as building up a community of editors that can grow on its own.
So I remain optimistic that although it will requite what will feel like a long period of beating our heads on a brick wall that eventually some thing will come out of it. It will just take time and perseverance.
A quick summery of the Xhosa workshops lack of success (as measured by article output) off the top of my head.
- Beginning of academic year: interest in learning more about, attending and editing Wikipedia for the Xhosa language professionals that this series of workshops was aimed at was high at the beginning of the year and petered off quickly because people had to get back to work and so felt they had less time to devote. - Computer literacy: as has already been mentioned in a previous email on this subject. - Over focus on Xhosa language specialists and lack of role-out to students and other possible interested editors. Students I think is a good area to possibly focus on in future outreach projects for the wiki.
On a more optimistic note I feel that it was not a complete loss because it did:
- Create an awareness of the Xhosa language Wikipedia amongst Xhosa language specialists and academics. Judging from discussions I have had with them previously they had no idea that it even existed and that they were able to even edit Wikis in general. - Created some good will and firmer foundations for future projects. People seem eager to learn more about getting back into it at the end of term. - Created some good will and introductions for other unrelated Wiki projects. Such as providing an introduction to the Western Cape Provincial Archives who I have been talking with about setting up a possible small GLAM project. Time will tell though if anything comes out of that.
Cheers,
Douglas. Discott
P.S. Many thanks again Ian for helping out with the first workshop.
On 14 April 2012 07:41, rupert THURNER rupert.thurner@gmail.com wrote:
hi ian, a very interesting post. are you able to somehow judge how prices influence participation, quality, and sustainability?
On Fri, Apr 13, 2012 at 23:16, Ian Gilfillan wikimediaza@greenman.co.za
wrote:
I've posted an update on the state of the African language Wikipedias: http://www.greenman.co.za/blog/?p=953
Been some positive progress, although Xhosa in particular is
disappointing
after the three workshops.
-- Ian Gilfillan www.greenman.co.za
WikimediaZA mailing list WikimediaZA@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaza
WikimediaZA mailing list WikimediaZA@lists.wikimedia.org https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/wikimediaza
I think Douglas is right.
People don't become long-term contributors of Wikipedia for any other reason than because they want to. And it's a relatively rare person who has that mix of skills, interests and passion.
I don't know the details, and I'm sure Google has some more experience after their experiments in Swahili and Tswana, but I'd suspect prizes have both a positive and negative influence. They attract people for the "wrong" reason, in that they're initially motivated by the prize. In the case of the Swahili Wikipedia, I heard negative reports -the new arrivals disrupted the existing community (which was already fairly established). However, as in the case of the Tswana Wikipedia, prizes can also create an awareness and an interest which (thanks to the individuals involved, not the prizes) has been sustained. I'm sure Google honed the criteria between the two experiments, and we could learn from them.
wikimediaza@lists.wikimedia.org