Expanding existing articles has its pitfalls as well. Having a lot of
work summarily reverted is possible there as well, though less likely.
Possibly worse is developing your own writing style and technique in
isolation and having no-one there to point out your mistakes results
in either painfully unlearning and relearning the correct way to do
things, or running into even more trouble further down the road. The
cardinal rules I would give would be something like (in no particular
order):
1) Take things slowly and stop and discuss if needed
2) Read and watch, and ask and learn, and show and help
3) Be helpful not confrontational, and be patient
4) Treat others as you would like to be treated
Along with that, always remember how big and chaotic Wikipedia is and
can be. Don't avoid other areas, but find areas you like and enjoy and
ensure you always have those areas to return to if things get
stressful elsewhere.
Carcharoth
On Wed, Oct 12, 2011 at 11:55 PM, MuZemike <muzemike(a)gmail.com> wrote:
I don't think that is entirely reasonable thing to
say or do, but, on
the other hand, I wished that newcomers would be aware that creating new
articles from scratch is not the only way to help contribute to the
encyclopedia. Assuming that Wikipedia is still nowhere close to being
complete, there are always going to be opportunities to expand existing
articles - many of them that are still stubs. I don't know of any good
way in which to guide newcomers towards that direction, though,
especially in a "come-and-go"-type environment such as this.
-MuZemike
On 10/10/2011 7:08 PM, Tony Sidaway wrote:
The only important rule here is to be bold. We
really ought to take more
steps to disenfranchise those who repeatedly stamp on attempts to create new
content. They know who they are, and I mean it. We should stop them hard.
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