A.      All the studies on female participation come up with low percentages
around 10% plus or minus a few percent. Of course, it is possible that in
all of the studies the women are choosing not to self-identify. It is an
inherent difficulty in any study if people choose to not reveal information.
But we know women make up large proportions of social media users, so if
women’s participation in Wikipedia is actually higher than studies show due
to reluctance to self-identify, it begs the question of why they are so
unwilling to self-identify in the content of Wikipedia but not in other
contexts. Either way, it points to some problem. The last Wikimania recently
released data that does show a higher level of female participation, about 1
in 3, I think. It would be interesting to see how the male/female numbers
break down across the various types of attendees, e.g. WMF staff, Chapter
members, event organisers, etc. My suspicion is that women are in higher
proportion among staffers, chapters, etc and this skews the Wikimania
participation. I don’t know how scholarships are awarded and whether women
are at any advantage in that process.

 

B.      A very interesting research paper
http://files.grouplens.org/papers/wp-gender-wikisym2011.pdf shows that women
are less likely to survive the newbie stage than men. But, perhaps contrary
to what many expected, their data does not suggest that women are more
easily discouraged by being reverted (they show men and women’s survival
rates in the face of reversion are similar) but that more women’s edits are
reverted than men’s edits and this is the cause of higher attrition among
women. This has caused me to wonder if women as newbies are more attracted
to articles where the risk of reversion is higher perhaps because there are
more policies to be considered (e.g. biographies of living people, noting
that women are predominantly the purchasers of “celebrity” magazines which
deal mostly in content related to living people). The paper does show that
men and women edit in different areas (men are more likely to edit in
geography and science for example) but the analysis is too high level to
answer my question. The other inherent limitation in any study of newbies
that there is nothing in the initial signup to Wikipedia that asks you about
your gender (even optionally) so very few newbies are self-identifying as
either male or female at that time. So, it’s actually very hard to study the
non-surviving female newbies because you can’t find them. This often means
our study of the experiences of newbies is based heavily on those who are
still around later to be studied or surveyed which introduces survivor bias
into the study. So this may be a consideration in relation to the findings
of this paper. Interview studies keep pointing to women not liking the
abrasive environment of Wikipedia. Civility is a part of that issue.
Although I think it’s not so much about the use of specific words, but
rather a general culture of aggression. The people who use the swear words
are simply much easier to spot and hold up as examples of the broader
problem than those who engage in equally aggressive behaviour but do so
citing [[WP:Policy]] and use the undo-button. 

 

C.      In relation to pro-active recruitment, I do a lot of that here in
Australia, edit training and edit-a-thons. While some of the edit-a-thons
have targeted women participants and are therefore predominantly women, edit
training events are generally not so targeted and attract both women and
men. From all of that I believe that women are not inherently disinterested
in contributing to Wikipedia. However, these events do not seem to create
ongoing editors (whether female or male) and this experience is not unique.
A recent survey by the foundation found that this is the case all over the
world. Generally, the one-event approach to edit training isn’t sufficient.
Greater success seems to come from regular events usually in a
university/college setting, but regular events are a challenge to resource
with volunteers (we have other things that have to be done in our lives).
Interestingly, most of the people who currently attend our sessions are
middle aged and older. Many struggle with the markup; I hope the visual
editor will address some of that problem. So I think we need to look at
diversity in terms of age as well as gender. But I don’t think outreach is
really the answer because it cannot be done at the necessary scale. It’s not
that we need to have a team of mentors, we need everyone to be willing to
help one another.

 

D.      One thing I learn from our outreach is that many of the newbies
(male and female) have unpleasant experiences even during the outreach
events as well as soon afterwards. Their edits are reverted (for what seems
to me to be no justifiable reason), new articles being speedily deleted or
splashed with messages about policies they don’t know about and don’t
comprehend, or left in an eternal limbo of rejection in Article for
Creation. These folks are all “good faith” and they are all newcomers but
the policies of “assume good faith” and “don’t bite the newbies” are
completely ignored. We have many editors who are very aggressive. I have no
idea if they are just angry with the world as a whole, or actually enjoy
bullying the newbies. While obviously there are benefits to a culture of
mentoring, even when I am in hand-holding edit-training mode (about as
mentoring as it gets and I provide my contact details off-wiki as well as
on-wiki for any follow-up), it’s difficult for me to justify to them why the
newbie’s edits are being undone because the edits simply aren’t that bad.
The situation makes me very angry. It is not as if it is the same small pool
of editors creating these problems where maybe one could try to take action
against them. It seems that we have such a huge pool of aggressive editors
that our newbies will randomly attract the attention of one of them. (Or it
may be that some bullying personalities are actively on the lookout for
victims and newbies are a soft target). 

 

So, all in all, I think if we need to go back to first principles “the
encyclopaedia anyone can edit” and see that the aggressive nature of the
community is working against this intention and seek to curb that
aggression. I think curbing the aggression would result in more editors both
male and female. So in that light, I would have to say that I find the
ArbCom decision distressing as it appears to acknowledge and reinforce that
the aggressive culture is both dominant and should continue to be so. 

 

Kerry

 

 

  _____  

From: gendergap-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org
[mailto:gendergap-boun...@lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Tim Davenport
Sent: Tuesday, 2 December 2014 5:40 AM
To: Gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: [Gendergap] Moving Forward

 

Is that addressed to me? Not sure. In any event, the first link doesn't seem
to me either a "lack of civility" or a "gender gap issue," but rather
another one of the tens of thousands of more or less unimportant
conversations that happen backstage at Wikipedia by people killing time in
between contributing to the encyclopedia.

 

That said...

 

(1) Political organizing should happen off wiki, not on wiki. This is just
as true for WikiProject Conservatism as it is for WikiProject Gender Gap
Task Force. Wikipedia is not the place. Go for it, just not there.

 

(2) GGTF misfired by obsessively identifying with civility patrolling as its
primary function. At a minimum, that is putting the cart before the horse.
Going further: I would argue that it is an an absolutely misplaced
predilection, that a very low-importance contributing factor to WP editor
gender disparity has been elevated into The Main Reason without statistical
evidence. It's a hot-button topic at WP and it was a fight poorly chosen.

 

(3) Here's what needs to happen:

 

A. Quantify and track the actual gender gap at WP over time. Anecdotally,
female participation at events like Wikimania is significantly greater than
the 1F:7M ratio that would be anticipated from the estimated ratio of
registered editors. Does this mean that the differential is exaggerated due
to an undercount or under-self-reporting of female editors? Why are there
not annual estimates made and tracked by WMF or by GGTF itself?

 

B. Survey to determine the actual reasons for participation or
non-participation. This is something GGTF can do. Analyze the editing
patterns of randomly selected female and male Wikipedians, as well as those
who decline gender identification. Then get in touch with each of these
three sets to identify what they feel are the strengths and fundamental
problems of the Wikipedia experience. Similarly, poll the M/F/Decline To
Answer pools who fall inactive for six months as to the cause of their
non-participation.

 

C. Coordinate pro-active recruitment. Edit-a-thons, university outreach,
etc. targeting new female participants. This is the main way that gender
disparity will be overcome — one new editor at a time.

 

D. Targeted, organized mentoring. Watch the new editor pool and target
female newcomers. Help them through the learning curve. Too often newcomers
of both genders are left isolated; bring them into the community.

 

Count — Survey — Recruit — Teach.

 

 

Tim Davenport

"Carrite" on WP

Corvallis, OR

 

 

=====

 

>>>Not sure if this will produce a new thread or attach to the existing one
(I've checked my spam folder, there's nothing there) but anyway....


>>>Tim: I just wondered whether you regard this:
 
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Countering_systemi
c_bias/Gender_gap_task_force#Moving_forward>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia_talk:WikiProject_Countering_systemic
_bias/Gender_gap_task_force#Moving_forward

>>>...as a lack of civility or a gender gap issue?

>>>In particular this comment:
"...As has been indicated on the talk page of the proposed decision,
repeatedly, there is some question as to exactly which
 women this group seems to be reaching out toward, specifically, whether it
is more or less of a more or less radical feminist perspective...."

>>>I thought it summed up in a nutshell what the GGTF was really up against.
It's a kind of  <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McCarthyism
* Are you now or have you ever been a feminist who believes that sex work is
the opposite of feminism?
Anyone who answers yes that question is judged to be a "radical", a
subversive who wants to push POV and therefore they are fair game.

>>> On WP's list of feminists there were a very odd mish-mash of categories
of feminist
<https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_feminists&oldid=54413679
0>
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_feminists&oldid=544136790
and lots of names missing e.g. Gail Dines. I did a major rewrite to organize
it chronologically and it meant that "anti-pornography feminists",
"anti-prostitution feminists" and "socialist feminists" could go onto the
list
<https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_feminists&oldid=54566772
7>
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_feminists&oldid=545667727

>>> The list has recently been changed to this:
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_feminists>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_feminists and I'm working with a
couple of editors to see how we can improve it further.

>>> I've largely avoided trouble by sticking to admin based work such as
this, and similar work:
Cleaning up bibliographies, e.g. Joseph Schumpeter, from this:
<https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joseph_Schumpeter&oldid=63356603
4#Major_works>
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joseph_Schumpeter&oldid=633566034
#Major_works to this:
<https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joseph_Schumpeter&oldid=63434390
9#Major_works>
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Joseph_Schumpeter&oldid=634343909
#Major_works
Creating an article for the International Association for Feminist Economics
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Association_for_Feminist_Econom
ics>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Association_for_Feminist_Economi
cs
 and improving the article for the Human Development and Capability
Association
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Development_and_Capability_Association>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_Development_and_Capability_Association
then creating biographies for past presidents of IAFFE and fellows of the
HDCA.
Adding DOBs to notable scholars and then adding them to Wiki's calendar
(births).

>>>These organisations / individuals argues against sex work on the grounds
of the perception of women that is generated (i.e. as a thing / object). The
problem with the MRA, pro-porn, pro-sex work POV is they have no problem
with anti-porn etc. POV provided it is in a box labelled "mad" or
"religious" with a sub-text that the only people that could possibly support
that POV are from the moral right and are probably racist and homophobic as
well. The other problem that the MRA have is that, human development and
capability, which includes feminist economics / inequality / care work etc.
collectively constitutes a 'single broad topic' (WP:SPATG), so they are
unable to stop editors, who wish to edit in this area, from doing so. The
natural place for this work is within the Gender Studies project. Which is
why they write nonsense like this:
<http://www.avoiceformen.com/feminism/fighting-wikipedia-corruption-censorsh
ip/>
http://www.avoiceformen.com/feminism/fighting-wikipedia-corruption-censorshi
p/ (if there were really the kind of censorship that they are talking about
on WP then there would be no Pornography Project).

>>> Any attempt to show 3 distinct POVs
(a) Pro-sex work
(b) Right-wing anti-sex work (on moral / judgemental grounds), and
(c) Left-wing anti-sex work (on negative perception grounds) - the POV that
dare not speak its name
... is met with a steel fist hammered onto the table.

>>> I made a video for use in the article "sex wars", an article which is
all about the separation between (b) and (c)
<https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Feminist_sex_wars&oldid=54699519
0>
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Feminist_sex_wars&oldid=546995190
It was deleted instantly on the grounds that the "Video makes little sense
and does not add to informational value of article." I dispute that it
"makes little sense" and why does it even need to add informational value?
Why can't it just be to add aesthetics to the article as pictures and videos
often are?

>>> As soon as I step off the path of admin related tasks that the MRA-mob
can't get me for, and stray into article content I am jumped on, obstensibly
for technical reasons but they are almost exclusively by editors whose other
edits are connected to porn and sex-positive feminism, who have pretty much
hijacked the Feminism project and they are trying to do as much damage as
possible to the Gender Studies project as they can as well.

>>> It may be time for an article on "fourth-wave feminism" which is
separate to the "history of feminism", but the article would have to say
that the term is used by both (a) and (c),
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_feminism#Fourth_Wave>
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_feminism#Fourth_Wave . You're not
supposed to mention (c), you're only supposed to mention (a) and (b) - and
then arch your eyebrows at the moral and out-of-touch group that is (b).
Anyone trying to create it would run into the MRA trying to lump (b) and (c)
together. The talk page would be full of stuff like, "well the article
should say that, 'group (b) have been called fourth-wave, but it is just a
very, few number of places and the term is far more attributed to group (a)
than any other group of feminists'.

>>> This message is longer than I originally intended it to be but I do
think that there are a lot of well meaning editors on WP who are either
unaware or a bit naïve when it comes the antics of the people that we are
talking about. It is also naïve to think that they are not co-ordinating
their handiwork off-wiki.

>>> Marie

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