Learning and Evaluation/Evaluation reports/2015/Other Photo Events
This summary page presents a high level answer to those questions. Click through the tabs on the navbar to find detailed sections diving deeper into the data.
Read this page for a description of the program, data highlights across three core outcome areas, and lessons learned across program implementations.
Program history
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Photo events focus on improving the quality and amount of photographs about specific topics. These events can last from a single day to an entire year. Most initiatives start with online organization and planning, and then move offline quickly, with participants going out in the world to document specific subjects and upload relevant images to Wikimedia Commons. Subjects vary, and include historic places, protected areas, plants, animals, art inside of museums, music festivals… and food! Some of these events are organized as contests, where participants are eligible to win prizes. Others simply aim at documenting the world while participants have fun with other Wikimedians and explore their environments. One example is WikiExpeditions, where participants might go camping or stay in hotels while visiting new places and sites for a weekend. The media (which are most often images, but can also be video and sound files) are uploaded to Commons after the event, and volunteers often categorize and distribute the images on Wikimedia projects. The first documented photo event was Wikipedia Takes Manhattan, which took place on April 4, 2008, in New York. The event, which was coordinated by Wikimedia New York City, Columbia University, and New York University, was focused around a scavenger hunt. Participants would wander around the city to photograph subjects that had an existing Wikipedia article, but lacked images to fully illustrate it. Images were uploaded to Wikimedia Commons and the event model caught on. Since 2008, a number of other volunteers and organizations picked up the concept of organizing photo events that cover specific topics, in most cases within a local context. | |||
On content production
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On user recruitment and retention
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Shared learning
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Lessons learned
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