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This discussion page is inactive and preserved for reference in the English Wikipedia's historical archive. As an archive item, its contents don't necessarily represent current information or consensus on project matters. It was active in early 2001. Item description: The original proposal of WikiProjects, with some associated discussion Looking to revive discussion on this? The talk page of an archived item is unlikely to be monitored, so start a discussion at an active venue like the village pump instead. |
This proposal was written by Manning Bartlett.
This is a proposal for all and sundry to read and consider. Because of its length, I chose not to include it in the general 'suggestions' page, although I have placed a link there. If you feel this belongs somewhere else, please feel free to move it.
My field of professional expertise is Metadata Management - that is, the information about the information. I have spent the past few days pondering how to apply this knowledge to the Wikipedia.
I have adapted a concept from this field and (tentatively) titled it a "WikiProject". I am defining a "Project" as a comprehensive catalogue of "related information entities". Examples would include "Countries of the World", "Famous Scientists", "Games and Sports", whatever. (q.v. the Tree of life, already in existence.)
A WikiProject is a metadata page that serves as a reference point for those who wish to be involved in a specific project.
Structural principles for a WikiProject page
Note: such pages already exist in an ad hoc sense (eg: Tree of Life). However, my concept for a WikiProject page seeks to standardise and formalise this approach. also it seeks to segregate the "information" from the "management of the information".
What are the advantages?
What a WikiProject is not:
A Wikiproject is not a place for subject information. It is a place for the management of entries within a specific subject area. Neither is it rigids in its hierarchical management. All hierarchies are arbitrary, the Wikipedia seeks to create one purely for the management of entry creation, not as a schema of knowledge.
Is it worth the effort?
The value of such a metadata management model increases with the volume of contributors. In a case where only a handful of contributors are working on a project the actual value of a WikiProject page is negative - it only adds additional work. However, as the volume of contributors increases the work required to maintain the WikiProject pages is substantially less than the work required to correct the fragmentation of style and content, and the duplication which will otherwise occur. (Have you ever spent an hour tracking down and editing REDIRECTs?)
A sample WikiProject page is laid out below for consideration:
EXAMPLE PAGE
Title: WikiProject Musical Instruments
Scope: This WikiProject aims to catalogue all known musical instruments.
Parentage: This WikiProject is a child WikiProject of Music
Descendant Wikiprojects:
Formatting: (Discussion of how each musical instrument entry is to be formatted, sample given, including eg: Name, alternate names, description, evolution, relatives, see also, etc)
Hierarchy definition: Instruments can be placed into one or more of the following categories - Orchestral, Brass, wind, stringed, ethnic... (notice the categories are not mutually exclusive - a trumpet is both brass and orchestral and belongs in both)
Directory of Participants
General Strategy and Discussion forum
END OF EXAMPLE
Notice that in the example the structural definitions are as fluid as everything else. The natural evolution of "proposal - consensual discussion - consolidation" will occur. (As the discussions about structure die down, the suggestion becomes the 'convention')
Anyway, this is just a proposal and I am keen to hear feedback from any and all. As this is the Wikipedia, I am aware that I am free to commence this WikiProject idea anyway. However if people are warm to the idea, it would be nice to plan and consult as we lay down the framework.
COMMENTS
I like this idea, and I think it could work with Magnus's additional namespaces to allow for using the wiki as an organizational tool for WikiTeams to use to structure their activity on the Wikipedia. User:MRC
I'm probably the guy doing the most work on sports at the moment, and my current goal is to have a couple of paragraphs describing the origins, basic outline of play, elite championships, and geographic representation of every sport I can. Obviously, I could apply your organisational tools to my current work, but I'm unconvinced that the overhead is worth the benefits (things tend to coalesce naturally anyway, in my limited experience. However, it's probably worth a shot. Would you be interested in helping me give it a try for sports? User:Robert Merkel
I think its a great idea Manning. As far as comments on what information should be in a particular type of article, I've already done something like that in talk:U.S. States; I like your proposal because it takes organizes that sort of meta-information coherently. The only wonder I have is how are we going to create WikiProjects? We can either create them as an a priori hierarchy, based on how we think human knowledge is organized (kind of like how categories on the HomePage are organized); or we can let them evolve organically (create them whenever one feels the need, do not worry about the relationship of any one topic with any other. Personally I'd favour a middle way -- create one WikiProject for each main category in the HomePage scheme, and then people can create subprojects as they feel fit -- let us worry about how the subprojects fit together within each main category as we feel the need to. -- User:Simon J Kissane
I'm not sure how I feel about this yet. Basically, I think that at this time efforts at setting more specific content rules is a bit premature. My biggest worry is that it might end up discouraging people from working on Wikipedia. I think that, basically, the thing has so far been successfully organizing itself, and that more formal organization and standardization is better done after we have loads and loads of content to organize and standardize--which, despite our 11,000 articles, we don't actually have, in my opinion. But I'm intrigued by the proposal and I think we should think more about it. --User:Larry Sanger
I like your ideas and your input into Wikipedia very much !!!
It is really suprising how different people come to the same conclusions.
We discussed metadata issues some time ago.
I proposed some metadata patterns that are very much like yours.
I proposed teamwork inside English Wikipedia and between International
Wikipedias. There was also some discussion on the Wikipedia mailing list.
The general voice was not encouraging and there was a strong opposition from Larry Sanger.
Please see :
WikiProject/Origin of life and related debates