Wikimania/Scholarships/Selection Criteria
This is just a very quick page I'm making to gather ideas on what might be good selection criteria for Wikimania scholarships. Later, a proper consensus-oriented process will make actual decisions about what the final selection criteria should be. At this point, I am just curious to solicit some ideas & thinking. Thanks for helping. Sue Gardner 21:37, 26 November 2008 (UTC)
Background
[edit]About one in 10 Wikimania scholarship applicants are approved for a scholarship - which means it a fairly competitive process. Given that, it seems reasonable that we would want to 1., have very clear selection criteria, and 2., make the criteria transparent and visible.
Process
[edit]I want to brainstorm here potential selection criteria, as well as comment on/discuss them. Later I am assuming there will be a Wikimania scholarships committee of some sort, with representation from the community and the staff, which will finalize the criteria for Wikimania 2009 and future Wikimanias.
Brainstormed list of proposed criteria
[edit]At this point, I think it's okay if the criteria overlap or contradict each other. For example, we could choose -if we wanted- to have criteria simultaneously encouraging both students and older people.
- Demonstrated commitment to the values & goals of the Wikimedia projects (assessed by e.g., years of involvement, number of edits made, lines of code written, etc.)
- OR has demonstrated commitment to the values and goals of Free Software, Free knowledge or education and shows an interest in Wikimedia projects. (Other FLOSS or like-minded organisations, possibility of partnerships and added value)
- Financial need (e.g., full-time student or other non-FT-working person)
- Unusually high travel expenses (e.g., people who live in locations remote from the venue)
- New and promising Wikimedians (people who have not been involved for very long, but are making a particularly good contribution)
- The presence of the attendee would add value to the conference, ie:
- Gives a presentation (that covers an important/missing subject)
- Brings in important opinions in panels / open discussions
- Is active in the organizing team and help would be useful on site
- Is interesting to the press
- Makes the attendees more representative
- Different regions of the world
- "Representatives" from at least all major communities
- Focus on getting editors from small and new communities who show commitment to spread Wikimedia values.
- Programmers who are willing to develop the code and hardware management we currently have
- etc.