Learning and Evaluation/Evaluation reports/2015/GLAM/Outcomes
Content uploadededit
Upload counts were available for 46 GLAM implementations (100%). A total of 57,578 images were uploaded to Commons during these implementations. Of those images, 8,747 (15%) had already been used on 255,867 Wikimedia project pages by February 2015 when use was assessed. The number of media added per implementation ranged from 0 to 12,649. The median number of media added per implementation was 213.[3] The number of unique images used per implementation ranged from 0 to 2,453 and the average was 50.[4] Proportion of media uploaded that was used on Wikimedia article pages ranged from 0 to 99% and the average was 8%.[5] For the middle 50% of implementations, more than 2% but less than 43% of the media the implementation uploaded is used on Wikimedia article pages.
Content viewededit
We could not obtain the number of pageviews of content contributed as part of the GLAM implementations in this report. However, 14 GLAM partnerships for which implementations are included in this report track the number of times all of the content they have uploaded has been viewed across all wikis. These 14 GLAM partnerships (32%) contributed content that has accumulated over 5,100,000,000 pageviews across the Wikimedia projects since the partnerships’ inceptions. The fewest pageviews were 12,000, to a partnership that has, to date, uploaded 30 media since they began in July 2014. Approximately 4,100,000,000 pageviews were to content from the National Archives and Records Administration of the United States, which has contributed 125,963 images since it began uploading content in July 2011. Another 760,000,000 pageviews were to content from Project Phoebus at the Museum of Toulouse, France, which has uploaded 3,307 media since it began in 2010.
Quality improvementedit
By February 2015, across the 57,578 media uploads for implementations included in this report, there were 1,839 image ratings assigned:
Implementations with more media rated as Quality, Featured, or Valued tended to also have higher use of media in articles.[10]
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Inputs & content creatededit |
Cost per article created or improvededit
Of the two implementations that reported data on both budget and media uploaded, one implementation had 525 participants, spent $2,400.00 USD and uploaded 7,334 media. The other had one participant, spent $3,201.70 USD, and uploaded 84 media. For the first implementation, 685 unique media are already being used on Wikimedia article pages, while 76 are already being used from the second. Different styles of GLAM partnerships and implementations require different budgets and participants and the number of media uploaded vary widely. We need more data on GLAM budgets before we can explore the impact of budgets and number of participants in different contexts.
Cost per media uploadededit
Two GLAM implementations reported both budget and number of media uploaded. The cost per media uploaded ranged from $0.33 USD to $38.12 USD and the average cost was $19.22 USD.[11] However, more data is necessary before we can understand the costs per media uploaded for the wide variety GLAM implementations.
Participation and Contentedit
For the 22 implementations (48%) which reported both participants and media uploaded, there was a positive relationship between participants and media uploaded. [12] For the 22 implementations (48%) which reported both participants and unique media used on Wikimedia project pages, there was no relationship between participants and unique media used.[13]
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Replication and shared learning
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75% of implementations reporting were run by an experienced program leader who can help others in conducting a similar program. You can find which people or organizations ran these implementations in the data table.
GLAM implementations and partnerships, while diverse in their program models, types of partnerships, and institutions, generate a treasure trove of knowledge on how to programs can be replicated or scaled. Further investigation is needed to see how these resources are shared among program leaders in order to learn from one another's experiences and practices.
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