User:MCruz (WMF)/Sandbox/Program Reports/Wiki Loves Monuments/Data turnout
This report systematically measures a specific set of inputs, outputs, and outcomes across Wikimedia programs in order to learn about evaluation and reporting capacity as well as programs impact. Importantly, it is not a comprehensive review of all program activity or all potential impact measures, but of those program events for which data was accessible through voluntary and grants reporting.
Read this page to understand what the data tells you about the program and what it does not.
Response rates and data quality/limitations |
Only three program leaders reported a Wiki Loves Monuments implementation directly to us
For the 24 mined Wiki Loves Monuments implementations, we used publicly available information that was found on organizer websites and on wiki. We were able to collect information about: number of participants, number of photos added, number of photos used in the projects, and ratings of photo quality (Featured, Quality, Valued). We were unable to determine priority goals or input hours through this process of mining the data, but we did contact program leaders for the 24 mined Wiki Loves Monuments implementations to review and confirm the numbers gathered, and to share whether they had used additional funds or any donated resources. However, since we did not gather the complete set of reporting questions from those program leaders whose implementations were mined, we also do not know there program status in terms of shared learning. Still, this report does not represent findings from all Wiki Loves Monuments events, and does not reflect the value of the many hours of volunteer time that are input into planning and implementing these events.
| ||||||||
Priority goals |
Since Wiki Loves Monuments has similar goals to other photo-based competitions, the goals of these were analyzed together. Five Program Leaders reported their "priority" goals for their photo upload events (100% of those providing direct report). Participants selected between 4 and 14 priority goals for their upload events. [1] Looking at the aggregate selection of priority goals for content donations, only two goals stood out as priority across implementations, however, many were selected by the majority of the five reporting program leaders. The top two goals, selected by four of the five program leaders, were to (1) Increase awareness of Wikimedia and its projects and (2) Make contributing fun, although, clearly, increasing contributions, in terms of photo content, is very much a core target of all these events (see Table below).
|