Forum:Inducing Wiki Magic: Difference between revisions

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==Comments==
==Comments==
Woot! Bring it on.[[User:Sith Venator|<span style="color:green">Sith-venator Wavingstrider</span>]] [[File:Fett helmet.jpg|20px]] ([[User talk:Sith Venator|<span style="color:blue">Commlink</span>]]) 03:41, 24 February 2014 (EST)
Woot! Bring it on.[[User:Sith Venator|<span style="color:green">Sith-venator Wavingstrider</span>]] [[File:Fett helmet.jpg|20px]] ([[User talk:Sith Venator|<span style="color:blue">Commlink</span>]]) 03:41, 24 February 2014 (EST)
This is an excellent idea to help improve our content. Perhaps to attract traffic to it, maybe create a module to be placed on the [[Main Page]] or the [[Halopedia:Community|Community Portal]], similar to the Featured Article module that randomizes the articles needing work? As for naming, how about Articles for Improvement?--{{User:Spartacus/Sig}} 15:02, 24 February 2014 (EST)

Revision as of 16:02, February 24, 2014

Forums: Index Community Proposal Inducing Wiki Magic
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Recently, the idea of a system to encourage more active involvement in articles in need of attention was brought to light in this forum thread. I've had plans for something like this for a while now (~4 years) and felt the concept required a tad of explanation and possibly additional brainstorming to develop it further, if necessary. Subtank and Tuckerscreator suggested a banner or notice with pages linked via a specific category, which is a good idea, though what I've had in mind for a while is maybe a tad more ambitious and extensive.

In short, the goal is to come up with a more efficient way of bringing articles in need of repair to everyone's attention, and having them fixed through a collaborative process—essentially, channeling Wiki magic which doesn't quite work by itself with a userbase this modest. The concept should be relatively simple to implement and run, and potentially very useful if users pick up on it.

The concept

The core concept is a weekly list highlighting a batch of articles in need of improvement. All users may suggest and vote on potential articles for the queue on the talk page (not unlike our Featured Article system, though hopefully more trafficked), and articles are added to the list by a user or set of users charged with maintaining the project. The number of these "moderators" depends on general interest in the project, though I obviously volunteer myself. The suggestion doesn't have to come from the talk page, and the moderators may add articles on the list based on their own discretion, as long as the list stays coherent. The moderators also determine when a page has received sufficient improvement to have it removed from the list. While ideally, we would introduce a fresh batch of article every week, if there are still pages on the list by the end of a week they'll carry over to the next week and will not go away until they've been repaired.

Why have it be weekly and not just a list where the improved articles are consistently replaced by new ones? Because breaking it down into a weekly thing feels more rewarding. If users manage to clear the whole list in a given week, the sense of accomplishment is much greater than if the articles just kept coming endlessly which can be pretty overwhelming and easily lead to an air of futility.

To add on that, instead of removing the fixed articles from the list completely we could illustrate progress by dropping them in their own subsection or, better yet, have "check boxes" generated via two images - "unchecked" and "checked", corresponding to "not done" and "done". What constitutes as "done", then? A good standard by which to determine the quality of the article would be to ask yourself whether it needs any notice templates or not. If it's properly sourced, accurate, comprehensive and well formatted—in short, up to our general standards of quality—it can be considered fixed.

Priorities

While users may nominate any article for the list, it would be useful to first consider the significance of the article in question. There doesn't need to be a strict guideline and basic judgment on part of the moderators should usually be enough. Still, as a general rule, it should be noted that canonically significant subjects with potentially higher page traffic should take precedence over lesser ones, e.g. supporting characters. People also tend to look up information from new subjects; right now, those are Mortal Dictata and Escalation and probably still Halo 4. So, if there are articles related to them in need of attention (and there are!) they should be pretty high up on the priority pyramid. Older material, wherever it needs improvement, shouldn't obviously be forgotten either, it's just that new content often tends to lay around unattended for alarmingly long periods of time before the recent information has been sufficiently covered, thus becoming "older" content itself.

Also, articles that require more drastic improvement should take priority over ones with less problems; a good rule would be that if an article can be fixed by a single user in a few minutes, it doesn't really belong on the list. On the other hand, if there's hundreds of words of writing to be done and tons of sources to be added, it's a pretty good candidate. Not everyone has time to make megaedits but the goal is to accomplish the same result through a cooperative effort. Another rule of thumb is to consider whether it's easier to just fix the article yourself or nominate it and hope others fix it, though it's true that not everyone always has access to the sources required for the job.

Categorization of issues

While the problems in articles (or the templates that indicate said problems) often speak for themselves, in order to direct editors to the specific matters in need of attention, the list would use a more or less flexible system to describe what needs to be done with a given page. On the most basic level, types of required editing can be divided into three categories (which often overlap):

  • Expansion: Your basic addition of content, from bringing biographies and histories up to speed to writing sections lacking in content or going more in-depth about a subject. May often require source material readily available. This type, in my opinion, tends to be our most pressing concern.
  • Cleanup: Grammar cleanup, rewriting, formatting - in general, emphasis on the improvement of existing content. Does not necessarily require sources at hand.
  • Fact cleanup: Citation of sources and the verification and potential correction of disputed facts. Obviously requires source material.

The categories are a basic tool to help editors identify the problems with the article and how suited the required style of editing is to their knowledge and present situation (particularly when it comes to access to sources). In addition to these basic categories, there should be a brief summary on the nature of the improvements needed for each page since, in some cases, those may not be immediately obvious (e.g. if more comprehensive information is needed from a given source).

Starting out

At the time we begin this project, I'd rather keep it as bare-bones as possible and run it for the first couple of weeks to see how it picks up. This helps us identify potential problems that may arise; for instance, if the initial one-week span is too short or the amount of work on the list is too overwhelming for that timescale, we'll make adjustments accordingly. In the beginning, I think ten articles per list should be a fairly realistic goal.

All we need is a catchy name. The ones I've thought up tend to come across as pretty dry, like "Collaborative Article Improvement Program" or "Weekly Article Improvement" and so on. Let's see if people have better ideas.

This mock-up should illustrate how a list (or a portion of one, depending on how long we want them to be) might look like, minus the flashy checkboxes and other trappings. We might also use a table for the list to make it look more organized.

  • Roland - Expansion: Information from the rest of Spartan Ops needs to be added.
  • Serin Osman - Expansion: content to be added from The Thursday War and Mortal Dictata.
  • Battle of Installation 05 - Formatting: Page cluttered by quotes and images, some of which unnecessary or incoherently placed. Writing should be tighter in places, more drawn-out parts (e.g. Battle of High Charity) should be summarized.
  • Battle of the Rubble - Cleanup/Fact cleanup: Content should be summarized and the writing should be brought up to encyclopedic standards. More sources need to be cited.
  • Daybreak - Expansion: Requires addition of gameplay info and strategies. (most post-Halo 3 MP map articles are awfully empty and would warrant inclusion on this list.)

To add on that, the articles on the list could also be rotated in a banner or small widget on the front page or recent changes with a link to the project page for the full list and further elaboration.

Future potential

While we should be off to a good start with the above, I have a few ideas we could gradually incorporate into the project in the long term.

  • The addition of rewards, possibly taking the form of "badges" awarded to users for participating in an improvement project? Or awarding distinguished editors, like the former HotM, but more specific and quantifiable?
  • Listing articles based roughly on a set of themes, instead of randomly. For example, each week we'd highlight a Character article, a Multiplayer article, a Gameplay related article, and so on. A lot of our Multiplayer and gameplay articles are pretty neglected right now and this project might help ameliorate that.

Comments

Woot! Bring it on.Sith-venator Wavingstrider Fett helmet.jpg (Commlink) 03:41, 24 February 2014 (EST)

This is an excellent idea to help improve our content. Perhaps to attract traffic to it, maybe create a module to be placed on the Main Page or the Community Portal, similar to the Featured Article module that randomizes the articles needing work? As for naming, how about Articles for Improvement?--Spartacus TalkContribs 15:02, 24 February 2014 (EST)