Public outreach/Academy/Workshops
Appearance
1:30pm – 3:30 pm Skills Workshops
[edit]- Workshop A–B: Wikipedia basics ("novice")
- Lead instructor A: John Broughton
- Lead instructor B: Tim Vickers
- Workshop C: Wikipedia intermediate editing
- Lead instructor: Awadewit
Planning
[edit]Planning for the workshops will be done on Saturday, July 11, via skype, at 1:00 p.m. Eastern (U.S.) time.
Two-way "learning track"
[edit]- Possible track for Web Authors and other professionals with social media expertise. Details here.
Physical set up
[edit]We will have two rooms with capacity for 30, plus Wilson Hall with capacity for 60, and possibly a 4th room with capacity for 30. Wilson Hall will be set up banquet style. The (smaller) break out rooms will be U-shaped.
Teaching assistants
[edit]- The consensus is that the volunteers do not have to be scientists.
- Frank has been in contact with some volunteers in the DC area who will be helping out in a 'teaching assistants' type role. As of July 5th, he reported the following were either in, or possible:
- Swatjester (in)
- MZMcBride (in)
- Maralia (open)
- Cyde (open)
- Mindspillage (open)
- On Thursday afternoon, July 9, John asked at WP:BOTREQ for someone's bot to post a request for volunteers to user talk pages of Wikipedians who self-identified as living in Maryland or DC.
Open questions
[edit]- Are there enough NIH scientists with at least of bit of Wikipedia editing to make it worth having an intermediate workshop, or should there just be three novice/basic workshops? [Survey question #2 touches on the matter of experience, but doesn't ask for very much detail.]
- Will volunteers (teaching assistants) arrive in the morning or at noon? (What time, exactly, and where, have they been told to enter NIH?) How will they get to the building?
- How many teaching assistants, ideally, do we want?
- Who is recruiting, and how?
- How many teaching assistants are we likely to end up with?
- What is process for NIH giving access to these volunteers?