Dear Jodi and all!
I hope that you are fine.
Here there is a wiki page listing suggestions on how to develop a research in a way that
respects Wikimedia community principles:
http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Notes_on_good_practices_on_Wikipedia_research
Hopeing is useful! Have a nice day, Mayo
«·´`·.(*·.¸(`·.¸ ¸.·´)¸.·*).·´`·»
«·´¨*·¸¸« Mayo Fuster Morell ».¸.·*¨`·»
«·´`·.(¸.·´(¸.·* *·.¸)`·.¸).·´`·»
Research Digital Commons Governance:
http://www.onlinecreation.info
Ph.D European University Institute
Postdoctoral Researcher. Institute of Govern and Public Policies. Autonomous University of
Barcelona.
Visiting scholar. Internet Interdisciplinary Institute. Open University of Catalonia
(UOC).
Visiting researcher (2008). School of information. University of California, Berkeley.
Member Research Committee. Wikimedia Foundation
http://www.onlinecreation.info
E-mail: mayo.fuster(a)eui.eu
Skype: mayoneti
Phone Spanish State: 0034-648877748
________________________________________
From: wiki-research-l-bounces(a)lists.wikimedia.org
[wiki-research-l-bounces(a)lists.wikimedia.org] On Behalf Of Jodi Schneider
[jodi.schneider(a)deri.org]
Sent: 20 April 2011 01:18
To: Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Subject: [Wiki-research-l] best practices for recruiting study participants?
What are the recommended ways to recruit Wikipedians for a research study?
My thoughts are:
Specific recruitment (i.e. to particular populations/randomized samples):
- email?
- Talk page messages?
Generic recruitment:
- post to the Village Pump
- post to the appropriate project mailing list(s)
Does that seem right?
Anybody willing to share successful email/Talk page messages (offlist is fine)? I'm
particularly concerned about giving sufficient info, tone, and not being spammy (perhaps a
hard balance to hit!).
-Jodi
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