I sent the following request to Richard Weait offline, and he replied, with a 
request that I post this to one of the OSM listservs for broader discussion.

Hi Richard,

As I recall, you've offered advice and encouragement for mapping parties, so 
I'm seeking advice on running one. This is being organized by several people, 
none of whom has run one before. I probably will be the only person who has 
attended a mapping party, some 2.5 years ago, run in a different format than we 
will be able to do here.

We have a date and time (Saturday, Oct. 29, noon-4), on the University of South 
Florida campus (exact location being chosen, but probably at the student 
center, which has a food court and abundant wi-fi capacity).  The campus is 
large (2km x 3km) and fairly-well mapped 
(http://www.openstreetmap.org/?lat=28.06173&lon=-82.41359&zoom=16&layers=B000FTF).
  The off-campus areas are not particularly bicycle- or pedestrian-friendly and 
have been mapped opportunistically, not systematically. During the past week, 
Potlatch2 has been displaying newer Bing imagery than was available when the 
area was mapped, so we now have imagery of some recent features that previously 
had been mapped solely by GPS. In the campus area, these include a rebuilt 
'complete street'; a number of new apartment complexes (some, unfortunately, 
gated which restricts access, and some have demolished prior buildings and 
roads); random additions of sidewalks; and new buildings/parking lots/sidewalks 
on campus and off). I intend to compile a list of things in the area that I 
know need to be mapped or (now that better imagery is available) corrected, 
just as a list of possible small projects for the afternoon.

About 15 people who are taking a GPS class in the geography department will 
attend to serve as mentors and buddies for people who do not have GPS devices. 
Class members may use the party as an opportunity to begin their required term 
projects for the class; it was this that led to the time and date for the 
party. We will encourage people who want to use GPS but do not have a device to 
either buddy up with someone in the class, or use smart-phone apps (although I 
don't think any of the organizers has much direct experience with these for 
OSM). The instructor and his teaching assistant will be able to provide some 
support with translating data into GPX from other formats.

In addition to members of the GPS class, we expect unknown numbers from the 
university bicycle club. A couple of members have done some mapping into OSM, 
mainly of speed limits 
(http://www.itoworld.com/product/data/ito_map/main?view=5&bbox=-9180542.18673296,3248621.5447371285,-9163877.00364404,3260246.8523668717&layers=&base_style=&clear_map_history=true)
 and point-of-interest. We expect similarly unknown numbers from the new 
geography club. A few of their members know about OSM but I don't know how many 
have any experience. In addition, during the two weeks preceding the party, I 
will be making presentations to 3-4 citizen advisory committees for our areas 
metropolitan planning organization, talking about a proposal to develop a 
multimodal trip planner for the region that will use bike/ped/wheelchair data 
from OSM. I will mention the mapping party and anticipate a small handful of 
people may attend from these briefings. Finally, we have downloaded the OSM 
data for the county and compiled a list of mappers from it, and I am contacting 
them via the OSM mail system, so far with almost no response (I'm starting with 
the most recent and most frequent mappers and working down the list toward 
those whose most recent edits are older). Students in the two student 
organizations also will be working their social communications channels, and we 
will do a press release. We have the party on an OSM wiki page and on a Meetup 
site, both of which we will develop more as soon as we have the meeting place 
confirmed.

The question is, how best to organize the time and run this? My own goal for 
this is to interest as many people as possible in working with OSM. I'm less 
concerned with what and how much gets mapped that day, and more about leaving 
people wanting to do more. So, what should we say at the beginning and do at 
the end to encourage this result? I don't teach, and although I'm told that I 
present material well, I don't have a knack for motivating people or organizing 
meetings. So, I would welcome your suggestions.

Edward L. Hillsman, Ph.D.
Senior Research Associate
Center for Urban Transportation Research
University of South Florida
4202 Fowler Ave., CUT100
Tampa, FL  33620-5375
813-974-2977 (tel)
813-974-5168 (fax)
[email protected]
http://www.cutr.usf.edu<blocked::http://www.cutr.usf.edu/>


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