Talk:Learning and Evaluation/Program Toolkits/Photo Events/ko

Latest comment: 9 years ago by Romaine in topic Concerns
This page is a translated version of the page Talk:Learning and Evaluation/Program Toolkits/Photo Events and the translation is 100% complete.
안녕하세요! 이 페이지를 사용하여 사진 이벤트에 대해 알고 있는 내용을 공유하세요.
자신의 단어를 사용하여 아래 질문 중 일부에 답하거나 알고 있는 관련 리소스에 대한 링크를 제공합니다.
목표는 새로운 프로그램 리더가 필요한 리소스와 질문할 경험이 있는 사람들을 보다 쉽게 ​​찾을 수 있도록 하는 것입니다.
이 페이지의 피드백을 사용하여 새 프로그램 툴킷을 만들고 툴킷이 게시되면 프로그램 리더 간의 대화를 촉진할 것입니다.

목표

사진 콘테스트 및 이벤트를 통해 달성할 수 있는 가장 중요한 목표 또는 결과는 무엇입니까?

  • A Wiki Loves ... photo contest is organised to have the public participate in taking photos and having them upload on Wikimedia Commons. The goal of such photo contest is to get a better coverage (filling up a gap) of that certain subject the Wiki Loves contest is about. Besides this, organisers can have additional goals. Romaine (talk) 22:07, 10 August 2015 (UTC)Reply


이러한 목표를 달성하기 위해 어떤 전략을 사용합니까?

Promotion

What are the best ways to promote photo contests or events in your context?

Participant motivation

What do you find motivates people to participate in photo contests?

Why do people join Wiki expeditions or photo tours?

Metrics

What metrics or measures of success do you track for photo contests and events?

  • The core measure of success is that the contest makes that there becomes a better coverage of the particular subject. Coverage is the key word, that is the primary goal of a photo contest and is thus the primary measure of success. Besides this goal, organisers can have additional goals they would like to achieve.
    Also I must make clear that a higher number of photos is considered to be nice, but if organisers have done their job, it is mostly a matter luck to have more or less photos. Also: the goals of WMF are not a measure of success for a photo contest, as a photo contest is organised by the community. Romaine (talk) 22:07, 10 August 2015 (UTC)Reply


What tools, strategies or processes do you use to gather or analyze metrics or measures of success?

Tools and bots

What, if any, tools or strategies do you use to track contest entries

What, if any, tools do you use in the judging process?

Do you use any tools or bots to incorporate images into Wiki pages?

  • For Wiki Loves Monuments we have Erfgoedbot which creates a list of unused images. The adding itself is manual, because there must be a visual human check to prevent problems. Romaine (talk) 22:07, 10 August 2015 (UTC)Reply

Learning Patterns

Help expand the photo event learning patterns by answering questions on the talk pages linked below and nominating topics for new learning patterns.

Answer questions such as: how to choose a location, how to promote the event to new users and what challenges to anticipate.

Expand this stub by sharing steps for how to start a program for community members to borrow high quality photography equipment.

Give some examples of the time and skills needed to plan photo contests, wiki tours or other photography events.

How to start a Wiki Loves photo contest in a small or inactive community

Is this a topic that needs a learning pattern? Do you have experience in this area?

How to identify image content gaps

Is this a topic that needs a learning pattern? Do you have experience in this area?

Endorse learning patterns

Promote and improve learning patterns that have worked in your context by adding a brief statement about your experience.

Planning resources

Please share links to mailing list threads, talk page discussions, best practices, tools, blog posts, videos or other resources you think are helpful for planning Wiki Loves contests or photo events. After the link, please add a short sentence explaining what the resource is.

  • WLM 2010 post mortem shares tips on planning timelines, coordinating volunteers, establishing partnerships and much more.

Concerns

I am concerned about the page this talk page belongs to. It can be handy to collect experiences, resources and methods. But something that is certainly not useful is the section Evaluation Reports, that contains the failure(s) of the year. Two highly problematic reports, and still used and advertised as "evaluation". The only conclusion I can draw from this, is that feedback provided by the community isn't taken seriously, or otherwise not seriously enough.


Photo contests are organised by the community with a specific goal, and that particular goal is not set by WMF. Such does not need to cause conflicts, but too many times I see that a activity by the community is judged/evaluated/etc based on the goals of WMF, which do not apply there. If the Wikimedia Foundation wants to support the community with its activities, WMF must recognize that the goals set by WMF are not the same as the goals from the community to organise a project. Romaine (talk) 22:30, 10 August 2015 (UTC)Reply

First, thank you for contributing so many ideas and resources to this page Romaine. You pointed out that conflict can come up when outcomes from contests get evaluated or judged based on WMF goals instead of the goals that communities have set from themselves. Success looks different to all of us, and we know that photo contests or events can help communities achieve many different kinds of success. The purpose (or at least the intent) of program toolkit pages and learning patterns about setting goals is to document the different kinds of goals that communities may want to focus on and the different ways that program leaders can achieve and measure progress towards those goals. Thank you for the reminder in your previous comment. I will be sure to take closer look at the discussions that followed the 2015 WLM report to make sure the toolkit captures discussions on goals and metrics that came up in that forum. --KHarold (WMF) (talk) 02:18, 11 August 2015 (UTC)Reply
Thank you! :-) I think multiple local organisers can give extra reasons for why they have organised Wiki Loves contests in their area. For some of them I have ideas about what reasons, but I would love to hear it from themselves. :-) Romaine (talk) 02:46, 11 August 2015 (UTC)Reply
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