For the benefit of anyone (like me) who doesn’t know what public domain day is, 
read:

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_Domain_Day

 

If you have newbie attending, remember that newbies face a huge learning curve 
in terms of both “how to do it” (the mechanics of editing) and “where to do it” 
(not familiar with the article space) and “what to do” (don’t know policies), 
so this all has to be risk-managed. You need to provide instructions on 
creating their account (tell them it is important to provide an email address, 
that we don’t spam them and it’s needed for password recovery) and setting 
preferences to keep the VE enabled  (or at least not disabled). This one-page 
cheat sheet produced by Wikimedia Nederlands is useful for “how to”

 

 
<https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cheat_sheet_Visual_editing_on_Wikipedia.pdf>
 
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Cheat_sheet_Visual_editing_on_Wikipedia.pdf
 (this is the English version, but it is available in a couple of other 
languages too, and if anyone out there is multilingual, it would be a great 
resource to translate into other languages)

 

For newbies, you need to make the tasks very well-structured. I find list-type 
resources very good for this: “Use this resource to add this kind of 
information to this set of articles and here is a worked example showing how to 
do it”. By repeating this task, they will learn the skills, and, as there tends 
to be natural variation even among articles of a similar topic kind, they start 
to have to make judgements about how best to do the task. “You said to add it 
to the section on Amenities but I don’t see an Amenities section but there is a 
Facilities section that seems to providing that sort of information, will that 
do or should I create a new Amenities section?” “Is it too much detail to add 
the opening hours in 1923?” (Probably yes!) Answering such questions by  
talking to the group can be helpful, as others are probably encountering or 
likely to encounter similar situations so a discussion helps all of them. 

 

You simply can’t teach all the policies newbies need to know at an event, but 
you should always mention copyright violation and biographies of living people 
if applicable (as they are instant-revert situation) but if this is 
new-to-public-domain material from 1923, I am guessing copyvio and BLP aren’t 
likely to be an issue. Make sure the tasks given to newbies is likely to be 
highly conformant with policy or of a nature not particularly constrained by 
policy (e.g. don’t get them to add external links), and your worked example 
should always be MoS-perfect in every way :) (some will slavishly copy it down 
to the unwanted extra punctuation you overlooked, while Others WILL Use Their 
Normal Writing Style regardless) 

 

You need the set of articles that the newbies are likely to work on to be 
low-risk. By this, I mean two things:

*        low engagement with other editors, e.g. not known to be real-world- or 
Wikipedia-controversial, not a lot of recent edit activity, low number of page 
watchers, in order to minimise bad experiences at the hands of “gatekeepers” 
and other over-zealous rule enforcers with the article on their watchlist

*        low daily readership so any serious errors made by the newbies have 
least impact on the readers

 

Do not suggest or encourage newbies to start articles. Even if you provide a 
list of topics (which you know to be notable) and provide them with some 
“reliable sources”, and confirm their accounts so they can avoid Article for 
Creation, the risk is that straight after the event, they will use their 
new-found article creation skills to create articles on topics of their own 
choosing, with the risk of speedy deletion or Articles for Deletion for failing 
notability due to unreliable sources. We know many newbies drop out due to bad 
experiences, which is why I try to structure their early contributions to 
minimise bad experiences. While you cannot protect them against everything and, 
while we have automated bots and regular contributors who thinks it is OK to 
bite the newbies, keeping your newbies working out in the “long tail” of 
articles certainly minimises the risk. If the articles you are suggesting for 
the newbies are likely to be within a WikiProject, it can sometimes be helpful 
to let that WikiProject know about the event in advance, asking them to 
“thank”, “welcome” and generally assist the newbies. I say “sometimes” because 
this does run the risk of alerting the gatekeepers and rabid rule-enforcers in 
that WikiProject to be hyper-vigilant. For this reason, I often try to 
structure my newbie engagements into WikiProjects where I am a regular or 
semi-regular member as that means I tend to know the community’s level of 
tolerance for newbies (and hopefully have some respect within that community) 
so my request don’t fall on deaf ears or actively-hostile ears. 

 

For the regular “come to events but don’t do much in-between” contributors (aka 
 occasional contributors), they still will benefit from some introduction to 
Visual Editor (if they haven’t previously seen it). And also, some pointers to 
some of the resources that you think have high potential to contribute to 
certain types of article, but the task won’t need it to be expressed quite as 
specifically as for the newbies. E.g. you might point to some books with 
biographies and suggest they expand or create an article on those people (a 
biography written in 1923 is unlikely to involve anyone still living today 
unless they were famous as a young child!)

 

With regular contributors, many will just grab the content and do their own 
thing with topics that interest them in most cases, but still might like to be 
pointed at resources that you see as real jewels in your 1923 collection in 
order to make the most of the new collection.

 

I hope you have great success with the event. 

 

Kerry

 

From: Libraries [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
phoebe ayers
Sent: Thursday, 3 January 2019 7:40 AM
To: Wikimedia & Libraries <[email protected]>
Subject: [libraries] public domain day & wikipedia

 

Hi all! 

Is anyone doing anything with public domain day and Wikipedia? We are running 
an edit-a-thon on Wikipedia Day centered around 1923 books we digitized here at 
MIT libraries: 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Meetup/Boston/Public_Domain_Day_2019

 

but I am struggling with what kinds of articles to work on or activities to do. 

 

Any ideas? Is anyone doing something similar in their libraries? I think it 
would be fun to go through the Hathitrust 1923 collection, which is now open, 
to see what would be good for Wikipedia: 
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/ls?c=149827760;a=srchls;q1=* 

 

cheers, 

Phoebe


 

-- 

* I use this address for lists; send personal messages to phoebe.ayers <at> 
gmail.com <http://gmail.com>  *

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