[EM] School of Election Science on Wikiversity
Michael Allan
mike at zelea.com
Fri Aug 12 19:41:16 PDT 2011
I chose you as my proxy, Abd:
http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Delegable_proxy/Table
What happens next?
--
Michael Allan
Toronto, +1 416-699-9528
http://zelea.com/
Abd ul-Rahman Lomax wrote:
> this has been posted to the electionscience and election-methods
> mailing lists, but a Delegable Proxy trial is being set up on
> Wikiversity. Please consider participating, link to your resources,
> etc. I'll assist as I do all Wikiversity users, but this is a special
> opportunity.
> ************
>
> I'd like to invite any interested in developing educational resources
> on election science to register on Wikiversity and participate in the
> School of Election Science. (Wikipedia accounts should work there if
> they've been linked as a Single Unified Login (SUL) account, but some
> people do register real name accounts on Wikiversity, it's far more
> like academia than Wikipedia.)
>
> Wikiversity isn't like Wikipedia, the comparison would be between a
> university and an encyclopedia. On Wikipedia, there is a constant
> struggle for space in a page on a topic, there can be only one page,
> and Wikipedia mainspace does not allow subpages.
>
> Wikiversity handles conflict, where users cannot agree, by forking.
> It is required that content be, overall, neutral, but individual
> pages can express opinions, and can be placed in a hierarchy for
> overall neutrality. Subpages may be used. Original research is
> allowed, even encouraged.
>
> As matters stand, Wikiversity is very small compared to Wikipedia;
> however, I (and some others) predict that Wikiversity could
> ultimately be much larger. Compare a university library with an encyclopedia!
>
> It has been very difficult to make Wikipedia articles reflect what is
> well-known in the field of election science, because often what is
> well-known isn't found in sources that Wikipedia considers standard
> reliable source. A great deal of the development of election science
> took place on mailing lists, over the last twenty years.
>
> Many new users on Wikipedia run into trouble because they want to
> discuss the topic. That's strongly discouraged on Wikipedia. It's
> part of the process on Wikiversity, just as students in seminars in a
> university are encouraged to discuss the subject.
>
> Further, it is, in theory, a standard practice, where Wikiversity has
> resources on a topic, to place an interwiki link to the Wikiversity
> resource in a corresponding Wikipedia article. This can provide a
> method for Wikipedia readers to find deeper material, including
> interactive learning, than is possible on Wikipedia.
>
> Wikiversity could also serve, and has served sometimes, as an
> incubator for better Wikipedia articles, because scholars on
> Wikiversity may freely cooperate on better-written articles, multiple
> versions if they can't agree, which can then be proposed as
> replacements on Wikipedia, thus bypassing the excruciating one edit
> at a time process that can make it very frustrating to edit
> Wikipedia. (If you make major changes to a standing Wikipedia
> article, be prepared to see them all reverted, quickly. But an RfC on
> Wikipedia could decide to choose an alternate version, and the
> decision, showing consensus, would stick.)
>
> Take a look at
> http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/School:Election_Science, I just
> started that resource.
>
> Drop on by http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/User_talk:Abd, my Talk page.
>
> And, while you are at it, take a look at
> http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/Wikiversity:Delegable_proxy
>
> Hopefully, this will be the first substantial application of
> Delegable Proxy beyond Demoex and Votorola. It was proposed as an
> experiment for Wikipedia about three years ago, and was, essentially,
> crushed. But Wikiversity is very, very different. I'm currently an
> administrator on Wikiversity, just to give you an idea. I can't use
> that to favor any position, but I've been working for well over a
> year to insure that Wikiversity stays open and free as a cooperative community.
More information about the Election-Methods
mailing list