After talking with Barry and Annie Lin, it seemed like a lot of the American university groups we've connected with would be off on winter break for the actual anniversary, so it was more likely we would get events later.
That has so far been the case. The U Michigan group is holding a trivia night in early February (and we sent them merchandise): http://ten.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann_Arbor,_MI
On Jan 22, 2011, at 6:33 PM, Sue Gardner wrote:
I think Jay had the most-correct answer- -- campus associations are our best bet. They work for organizations like Mozilla, and there's a natural constituency for us on campuses: students and professors. Plus campuses are really good at hosting small/impromptu/semi-official events. And I know that in university towns I've lived in (Peterborough, St. John's, Fredericton, Halifax, Toronto), there's usually good free event listing sites that lots of locals read, including non-university people who care about cultural stuff.
I wonder if the McGill group hosted an event, or the U Michigan group?
Sent from my phone: please forgive any typos or terseness.
On Jan 19, 2011 3:33 PM, "Michael Peel" email@mikepeel.net wrote:
I wonder: how many how many events are being organised by chapters, how many by the Wikimedia community, and how many by Wikimedia readers? Where is the bottleneck here - is it a lack of a US chapter, or does the community not feel 'empowered' (or insert a buzzword of your choice here), are we not communicating effectively to the US reader community, or is it a simple geographical issue? Put another way, how do we encourage the US community to be even more active with offline activities?
The same questions apply globally. Everyone's been doing fantastic things over the last month, but how do we turn that into something that is sustainable and can grow over the next [5 years/decade], in time for the [15/20]th birthday celebrations? In the UK (where I've been active), there have been three fantastic events (Bristol, Jimmy's party, and the British Library event - organised by three different people) - but that's a tiny number compared to how many events could have been run across the country if there had been more people engaged in organising them.
Mike
On 19 Jan 2011, at 22:09, Sage Ross wrote:
On Tue, Jan 18, 2011 at 8:58 PM, Rob Schnautz schnautzr@gmail.com wrote:
There were no more than 40 states which attempted to hold events. These amassed to around 50 events, but most of them (from what I could tell) were merely callouts to see if anyone was interested in doing something, usually with no more than five respondents if even that many. The only ones that appeared successful at all were very large metro cities. Taking these facts into consideration, most American Wikipedians would have needed to travel several hours to get to an event that was most likely no more than a small group get-together, and much further to get to an actual large celebration.
The Pittsburgh party was pretty successful; although only a small number of people signed up for it on either ten.wikipedia.org or the Pittsburgh meetup page on Wikipedia, many more signed up on Facebook. It was held at a sports bar during a Pittsburgh Steelers (American) football game, which wasn't scheduled until after we had picked the time and place for the party. There was actually a 15-minute wait to get in at some points. Nonetheless, dozens of Wikipedians and Wikipedia supporters showed up over the course of the evening. We only gave shirts to those who had registered (either on Facebook or a wiki) and we gave out all but (I believe) 4 shirts out of the 50 in the box.
Some people did, in fact, drive hours to get there... and are planning to do so for some regular meetups now!
Here are some pictures and a bit about how the party was, for those interested: http://ragesoss.com/blog/2011/01/17/wikimedians-are-awesome-and-wp10-pittsbu...
But we do, definitely, need better tools for gathering people together... the US, in general, doesn't have nearly as many meetups as it ought to.
-Sage
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