Grants talk:Project/Amyc29/Community of Soul: Writing Black Music History in Wikipedia
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Metrics
editPlease don't use account registration as a metric for anything, it's not significant. Use New active editor. I would be very happy to see more active African-American users on the English language and non-English Wikimedia projects! Nemo 14:22, 23 February 2020 (UTC)
Eligibility confirmed, Round 1 2020
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Generally very supportive of this approach, but questions about recruitment
editIn general, this model of experts with credibility in a field, running targeted events in partner settings works well. I.e. Black Lunch Table has been very high impact with this.
However, in the events that they have run so far, I don't see a track record of effective recruitment of participants -- the goal is 40 participants per event, but the events so far are in the less than 10 range from the documentation I can see on the grant page. How do the organizers plan to change the tactics in recruitment? What makes the gathering effective? As we have learned about editathons over and over again, simply publicizing one doesn't mean people will show up you need really good access to that local network of people, and organizers who can compel them to show up -- For example, we know that Black Lunch Table intertwines the Wikipedia component with a larger community effort of documentaiton that already has a community of traction around these topics, and the AfroCrowd community in New York is capitalizing on the strong community ties already in place. Additionally, editathons, in general, in the US and on underrepresented topic issues have a history of low retention/low content creation through one off events -- you simply don't have enough time to get people to build contribution habits and high quality content in the same setting. They are inspiring, great for literacy, but underwhelming in the stated goals.
I am wondering if there is a more creative tactic for using this volume of money for the same goal of engaging people deeper on this subject and creating high quality content on Black Music History -- (i.e. 3 day event with journalists, community members and academics that produces a larger volume of stuff following the same general principle of convening people (i.e the African Climate Change edit-a-thon). Or maybe recruiting folks before one of the conferences, and having some type of campaign strategy afterwards (like happened with Grants:Project/Smallison/Music_in_Canada_@_150:_A_Wikipedia_and_Wikidata_Project.
Anyway, happy to think about this as the grant process goes forward, Astinson (WMF) (talk) 16:44, 2 March 2020 (UTC)
Thank you for the feedback! Happy to answer further questions about recruitment and community engagement
editHi Astinson! Thank you for your feedback--we are very much in agreement with you regarding the need for effective recruitment strategy, but one thing I would note is that thus far our dashboards are not an accurate reflection of participants at our last three events (particularly in the case of our Charlotte event as the majority of people did not sign in on the dashboard--there were multiple reasons for this, all of which we have plans to mitigate moving forward). Additionally, what we have done so far has been without any funding support at all. That being said, we truly believe in this project and are passionate about it, so we are continually iterating on our model during this beta phase in order to refine our approach.
I wanted to make sure to address some of your specific questions, so I have listed them below:
How do the organizers plan to change the tactics in recruitment?
Thus far, our approach for the Charlotte event is the one we will build on moving forward. In advance of that event, I was a featured guest on two local hip hop stations' morning shows and the event was publicized via print and digital (local) newspapers and alternative arts publications--two of those being papers with a mission to serve the local Black community. We also worked with a local music promoter who spread the word through social media channels and events databases. A local designer (who does concert promotions) did our event flyer which generated interest within our target audience. By partnering with a local cultural center (the Gantt Center for African American Arts and Culture), they also made sure to promote, which aided in participant recruitment--and the local universities (UNCC and Johnson C. Smith, an HBCU) helped recruit participants. We have belief in this model of multithreaded community engagement with an emphasis on documentation (which is analogous to that of Black Lunch Table) with a focus on the musical genres that are culturally significant to our regional locations. For our next all-day event in Memphis next month, we have again partnered with a local music promoter (Neosoulville), the Memphis Stax Museum, the Memphis Slimhouse, and local artists to galvanize community participation. Now that we have a few similar events under our belt (and have made some adjustments in accordance with our review of outcomes), we believe this event will be even more successful. Through word of mouth, we are now fielding multiple requests from African-American Museums, HBCUs, and music industry folks (artists and promoters) in other cities (e.g. Atlanta, Dallas, Nashville, Mobile) to run similar Wikipedia community events, so we feel very strongly that this is a model worth continuing.
What makes the gathering effective? As outlined above, (1) establishing strong community partnerships is essential in getting people to come out to the event *and* to remain invested after the event itself is over, (2) clear communication to participants on the project's value proposition (e.g. documenting Black History and addressing attendant content gaps, improving citations), (3) accessible new editor training, (4) people see it as something "fun"--not just "work."
RE: the challenge of sustaining broad editor/community engagement and moving the needle in a measurable way toward creating quality content on Black Music History, we are currently in talks about creating a multi-day event with three partners: a music industry program, a music museum, and local recording studio. That said, we have plenty of creative ideas, willing community partners, and a strong network--and we are hoping for some funding to bring that vision to fruition. Happy to discuss further and/or answer any additional questions! All best --Amyc29 (talk) 20:37, 2 March 2020 (UTC)
- @Amyc29: I think you do answer my questions, I would love to see this better reflection in the Grant itself. I suggest:
- Better documenting the participation in your previous events, the current documentation doesn't seem to reflect the kind of impact you seem to describe: numbers are important to demonstrate the track record.
- I don't see any documentation or discussion of the multithreaded approach here -- How are you measuring/evaluating that? I currently don't see that in the impacts described.
- I would suggest being a bit more explicit about the comms strategy and retention strategies.
- Also, some provocative questions/ positions:
- If you are considering a multi-day event, that probably changes your budget a lot, or changes the funding/partnership model that you are assuming -- if you have a strong possibility of this coming through, I would endorse being a bit ambitious in that direction (I am not on the grant committee or the grant officer -- so don't know what is feasible, but this is a really important thing for us to get right in the movement).
- If you are fielding lots of requests, wouldn't it be better to develop a train-the-trainer model (could also be combined with the above multi-day strategy)? Black music has broad global appeal (and I am assuming community?), I could imagine a really interesting Art+Feminism style model of growth, that would decentralize the community more and build a large group of organizers -- instead of taking the core organizers on the road? -- just a thought -- but I get the impression that the black music scene/academic field has a similar amount of decentralized activist/organizer capacity, that might be a bit different than Black Lunch Table or the Audiences AfroCrowd usually work in.
- Sounds super interesting, looking forward to more work -- and I am always open for consultation, especially if this aligns more with my focus on Campaigns. Astinson (WMF) (talk) 18:31, 4 March 2020 (UTC)
- Also, want to flag @Fuzheado, Rosiestep, and Jackiekoerner: who are exploring another organizer training in the U.S. leadership Bootcamp. Astinson (WMF) (talk) 18:31, 4 March 2020 (UTC)
Aggregated feedback from the committee for Community of Soul: Writing Black Music History in Wikipedia
editScoring rubric | Score | |
(A) Impact potential
|
5.5 | |
(B) Community engagement
|
4.5 | |
(C) Ability to execute
|
4.5 | |
(D) Measures of success
|
5.3 | |
Additional comments from the Committee:
|
Opportunity to respond to committee comments in the next week
The Project Grants Committee has conducted a preliminary assessment of your proposal. Based on their initial review, a majority of committee reviewers have not recommended your proposal for funding. You can read more about their reasons for this decision in their comments above. Before the committee finalizes this decision, they would like to provide you with an opportunity to respond to their comments.
Next steps:
- Aggregated committee comments from the committee are posted above. Note that these comments may vary, or even contradict each other, since they reflect the conclusions of multiple individual committee members who independently reviewed this proposal. We recommend that you review all the feedback carefully and post any responses, clarifications or questions on this talk page by 5pm UTC on Tuesday, May 11, 2021. If you make any revisions to your proposal based on committee feedback, we recommend that you also summarize the changes on your talkpage.
- The committee will review any additional feedback you post on your talkpage before making a final funding decision. A decision will be announced Thursday, May 27, 2021.
Round 1 2020 decision
editThis project has not been selected for a Project Grant at this time.
We love that you took the chance to creatively improve the Wikimedia movement. The committee has reviewed this proposal and not recommended it for funding. This was a very competitive round with many good ideas, not all of which could be funded in spite of many merits. We appreciate your participation, and we hope you'll continue to stay engaged in the Wikimedia context.
Comments regarding this decision:
We will not be funding your project this round. The committee appreciates that the proposal represents an effort to address knowledge equity in Wikimedia projects with its focus on Black contributions to American musical culture in addition to the need to better represent the Black community amongst project contributors on English Wikipedia, which suffers from systematic biases that affect how information and history about the Black community is written and understood. It was also helpful to know that you have successfully piloted smaller events similar to your proposed activities, and we want to support organizers looking to grow their events or community when possible. The proposed use of music to engage and invite in communities to your activities is also novel and compelling.
However, the most significant concerns expressed by the committee were that:
- the risks and restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic appear to significantly limit the proposed activities that can be conducted during the grant period
- The proposal lacks a clear evaluation plan that indicates whether a goal has been achieved (i.e. Address content gaps in Wikipedia pertaining to Black History and Arts and Culture, Establish local community connections in order to "plant" Wikipedia groups that will grow after our events are over)
- the proposed activities may not promote sustained participation, as single edit-a-thons typically do not result in substantial retention of contributors, and that there is no explicit plan for follow-up with event participants.
We believe the proposal has promise, and if you would like to resubmit in a future round, Alex Stinson, Senior Program Strategist, Wikimedia Foundation has expressed in interest in supporting you in revising the proposal to address these concerns and increase the likelihood of future funding.
Next steps: Applicants whose proposals are declined are welcome to consider resubmitting your application again in the future. You are welcome to request a consultation with staff to review any concerns with your proposal that contributed to a decline decision, and help you determine whether resubmission makes sense for your proposal.
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