I don't know how it goes in other parts of the world but here in the UK if you 
apply for a job, take a one day course in a particular subject, or do just 
about anything, there is always an equal opportunities monitoring form like 
this one: 
http://www.city.ac.uk/about/working-at-city/hr-policies-and-health-and-safety/hr-policies/equal-opps-form
 to fill in.

I found it a bit shocking when I registered for Facebook, Wikipedia and other 
US-based websites that they had no apparent interest in the demographic make up 
of those opening accounts. If Wikipedia had an equal opps form at the point of 
registering a lot of this talk of doing surveys and trying to figure this stuff 
out retrospectively could be avoided. 

It's just not the kind of conversation that takes place in the UK because the 
first thing that happens is the equal opps forms are collected into a pile, 
there is an afternoon set aside for data entry, and there are your stats. I 
find talk of surveys a bit frustrating.

Marie

Date: Mon, 29 Dec 2014 21:56:44 -0500
From: nawr...@gmail.com
To: gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
Subject: Re: [Gendergap] Wikimedia Conference (was - Diversity training for     
functionaries)



On Mon, Dec 29, 2014 at 1:28 PM, Chris Keating <chriskeatingw...@gmail.com> 
wrote:
Hi Anne, Kerry and Christina - and everyone else,
So the Wikimedia Conference programme committee appears keen to do something 
useful in terms of creating space for gender - gap work. So I wondered if you 
had any further thoughts about what *might* work at the Wikimedia Conference.
As Anne points out it is an audience of people from Wikimedia movement 
organisations - board members, executive directors (where they exist), and a 
smaller number of other staff. Compared to other Wikimedia events there is 
probably a greater language and geographical diversity. There is also a 
reasonable degree of awareness of the issue - better than one would find if you 
put english Wikipedia administrators in a room.
The main focus for the conference is going to be on helping Wikimedia 
organisations grow, learn and improve - we are looking to give people practical 
outcomes, and are avoiding theoretical discussion as far as possible. 
Thoughts on what we can put in the programme on this issue are very welcome :) 
(I'll pass everything on to the programme committee, though I suspect I'm not 
the only member of it subscribed to this list).
Thanks and happy new year! 
Chris
The simplest thing to do is to describe the gender gap related efforts that 
other organizations have sponsored, urge the various movement entities to 
consider their own initiatives and - especially - push them to innovate. Few if 
any organized efforts have resulted in even small lasting change, so 
brainstorming ways in which chapters etc. can put their resources - real life 
organization and money - to use will be of greatest benefit.  This is an area 
where a chapter or affiliate has the opportunity to be a global leader and to 
have a high profile impact, and the more they understand that the more likely 
they are to participate. 


_______________________________________________
Gendergap mailing list
Gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
To manage your subscription preferences, including unsubscribing, please visit:
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/gendergap                          
          
_______________________________________________
Gendergap mailing list
Gendergap@lists.wikimedia.org
To manage your subscription preferences, including unsubscribing, please visit:
https://lists.wikimedia.org/mailman/listinfo/gendergap

Reply via email to