User:Mabeenot/sandbox

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Functions of a WikiProject:

  • collaborative group
  • discussion board
  • directory of interested editors
  • assessment and categorization system
  • repository of guidelines, resources, and templates
  • placeholder for organizational purposes

Motivational structures:

  • Goal-oriented: backlog drives, number of FAs/GAs/DYKs, collaborations of the month
  • Maintenance-oriented: watchlists, recent changes, tagging and assessments
  • Reaction-oriented: providing responses to questions and concerns on talk pages upon request

Types of WikiProjects:

  • Topic projects: Military History, New Zealand, Dogs, etc.
  • Cleanup projects: GOCE, Wikify, Spam, Deletion Sorting, etc.
  • Recruitment/Retention projects: Teahouse, GLAM projects, etc.
  • School projects: various high school and college courses editing Wikipedia
  • Sandboxes/Workshops: AfC, Graphic Lab, etc.
  • Archives: Infoboxes, Awards, Edit Counters, Essays, WikiWorld, etc.

Discouraged types:

  • Advocacy projects: Seek to push a POV, advertise, drive tourism, etc.
  • Clubhouse projects: Selective or secretive organizations that offer benefits to members

Useful observations:

  • "a project with one extremely active editor might get the same amount done as a project with many mildly active editors" User:Mlm42
  • "it's not really the number of FAs/GAs a project has under its scope that is important, but rather the rate at which they are producing new FAs/GAs." User:Mlm42
  • "Discussions about the project may be minimal on the project pages when very little of controversy goes on within a project. Such activity may come in short bursts, or take place between editors at other talk pages." User:JimMillerJr
  • "the occasional post at the sub projects is met by the deafening sound of crickets" User:Skeezix1000
  • "I do not think that any silent project, or any project of apparently zero active members, is actually fulfilling its primary purpose. WikiProjects are social groups. They are not reading material." User:WhatamIdoing
  • "dead projects are a problem for Wikipedia because: 1) New people who stumble on them do not end up with a positive impression of Wikipedia. We directly invite them on the banners to hit the project's talk pages if they have questions or want to discuss things. They get to the page and discover lifelessness. The whole place looks "abandoned" when you can't find anyone at a place that is designated for people to congregate. They ask questions, they get no response, and they either feel ignored or they decide that Wikipedia is too complicated to figure out... 2) Fragmentation results in isolation and lots of little independent "warrens" that wrongly believe themselves to be the entire community. One result is WikiProject "guidelines" that directly contradict normal practice... 3) Having thousands of WikiProjects makes it hard to find the right one for any purpose. We end up with a bloated directory (have you tried to find a project in an unfamiliar area recently?) and even if you find a project with a plausible name, there's no guarantee that locating the project will put you in touch with an actual person." User:WhatamIdoing

Current tools for measuring WikiProjects:

Information that would be useful:

  • WikiProjects by number/proportion of FAs/GAs
  • WikiProjects by number of active members
  • Edits to articles by a project's members in the past 6 months