User:Mjchesnel/RfA Review Recommend Phase

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Welcome to the Recommendation phase of RfA Review. In this phase, you will be asked to offer suggestions and proposals to address specific concerns and problems with the current Requests for Adminship process.

The questions below are taken directly from the 209 responses from the Question phase, each of which offered editors' thoughts and concerns about RfA. Based on those concerns, we identified the most frequently mentioned problems and included them here. These are the elements of RfA that are currently under review.

Please take your time and read through the concerns below. For each item, you are invited to offer a proposal that addresses the concern. Where possible, you are encouraged to provide examples, references, diffs and so on in order to support your viewpoint. There isn't a limit on the scope of your proposals; the sky is the limit, here. The intent of this phase is to get ideas, not necessarily to write policy - recommendations that gain traction and community support will be refined during later phases.

Most importantly, Answer as few or as many questions as you wish. All responses are evaluated, so any information you provide is helpful.

If you prefer, you can submit your responses anonymously by emailing them to User:Ultraexactzz. Anonymous responses will be posted as subpages with the contributor's details removed. If you have any questions, please use the project talk page at Wikipedia talk:RfA Review.

Once you've provided your responses, please encourage other editors to take part in the review. We stress that editors who didn't participate in the question phase are encouraged to participate now - more responses will improve the quality of research, as well as increasing the likelihood of producing meaningful results.

Once again, thank you for taking part!

Questions[edit]

Selection and Nomination[edit]

A1. Editors note that the RfA process can be daunting to prospective administrators, and that the process itself may discourage otherwise qualified candidates from seeking adminship. How can this "Selection Bias" be countered?

  • Response: ...

A2. Editors expressed concern over unprepared or unqualified candidates at RfA, noting that their candidacies result in NOTNOW and SNOW closures that can be discouraging. In lieu of minimum requirements for adminship, how can prospective candidates be educated about RfA and the community's expectations of its administrators?

  • Response: ...

A3. 44 editors expressed concern over excessive co-nominations. Some of these editors advocated a limit on co-nominations, perhaps capping them at one or two per candidate; others recommended asking prospective co-nominators to post a Strong Support in lieu of an actual nomination statement. How can the concern over Co-nominations be addressed?

  • Response: ...

The RfA Debate (Questions, Election, Canvassing)[edit]

B1. 60 editors expressed concern over the number of questions asked of candidates, and indicated that questions should be limited in number. How can this be accomplished? What limits could be fairly imposed? Are there alternative means for the candidate to provide information about themselves without the prompting of questions?

  • Response: the candidate should proposes a well thought through project which maximises the talents of the candidate and answer the needs of wikipedia

B2. Editors expressed concern over the content of questions, with 43 editors disapproving of "Trick questions", 8 disapproving of questions that require only a quotation from policy to answer, and 54 favoring questions that relate directly to the candidate and their experiences, contributions, conflicts, etc. How should the scope of possible questions be determined? Conversely, how would the decision to remove bad-faith or problematic questions be made, and by whom? What subjects should be specifically off-limits, and why?

  • Response: If the opening of the process was a declaration by the candidate of what they proposed to do as an administrator to improve the project then questions could be limited to a discussion of the declaration rather than anything else.

B3. Editors note that RfA is seen as a negative process, with issues such as badgering of opposes, personal attacks, and a general lack of civility being prominent concerns. How can the RfA process be changed to address these concerns?

  • Response: RfA will be a positive process if the candidate proposes a well thought through project which will improve wikipedia as a starting point for the process. This project then needs to be presented for discussion, mediated by a Bureaucrat to ensure civility. Following this the candidate can write his final project which can be put to a simple yes no vote.

B4. The very nature of the RfA process was disputed. Some editors desire rationales with every vote, and favor a more discussion and consensus-based process similar to other processes on the English wikipedia. Other editors desire a more vote-based election, where the raw numbers of supports and opposes are the critical factor. Is there one of these methods that would provide a clearer consensus on the community's view of a candidate? Or, alternatively, is a hybrid of the two preferable, and how should that be structured?

  • Response: the RfA process should be about matching the talents a candidate has to offer with the needs of the project. A discussion and consensus-based process is the best way of establishing the capacity of a particular candidate to be a good administrator. Once the candidates "offer" and the project's "needs" has been established the community can then vote on if they think the two match. This is a two tier hybrid process.

B5. The amount of discretion held by Bureaucrats to remove or discount problem votes was also discussed, with some editors favoring increased discretion for Bureaucrats. 25 editors also favored a detailed closing rationale from Bureaucrats, detailing the specific factors that resulted in the candidate being successful (or not successful). What changes to the RfA process or format could clarify community consensus on this issue? Should Bureaucrats take a more active role in managing (or clerking) ongoing RfAs?

  • Response: Bureaucrats must stop RfAs becoming slanging matches. An editor should be allowed to make his point once and the candidate should have a right to reply - end of story.

B6. 68 editors noted that a limited form of Canvassing or advertising would be acceptable, if such canvassing was done on-site and in a neutral fashion. How could a candidate advertise the fact that he or she is a candidate for adminship, while being completely neutral in the audience to which he or she advertises?

  • Response: Canvassing is fine but should take the form of offering to the community a set of ideas or tasks to improve the project. A written essay - limited in the number of words would be a good format.

Training and Education[edit]

C1. Though 73 editors responded favorably to the Admin Coaching programme, 39 were critical of the process for "Teaching for the test", or for being an RfA preparation programme rather than an Adminship preparation programme. In what ways could Admin Coaching be improved to focus more on adminship itself?

  • Response: ...

C2. In evaluating New Admin School, some editors noted that a Mentorship element would be of great benefit to newly minted administrators - something that Admin Coaching provides in a direct one-on-one coach-coachee team. Similarly, 15 editors characterized Admin Coaching, a primarily pre-adminship process, as being invaluable after the RfA, which is traditionally when New Admin School is used for training. Are there areas where the two processes overlap, and can be made more complementary? Are there common themes or elements that could be shared between the two processes, in order to improve the effectiveness of both?

  • Response: ...

Adminship (Removal of)[edit]

D1. Editors noted that the current voluntary Admins open to Recall process is redundant to Dispute Resolution process such as Requests for Comment and Arbitration. In the absence of Recall (i.e. if it were removed altogether), how could existing processes be adapted to more effectively deal with issues of administrator abuse?

  • Response: ...

D2. Editors cited the voluntary nature of the Admins open to Recall process as problematic, and 40 went as far as to recommend a mandatory process for all administrators, either as a mandatory form of Admins open to Recall, or a more formal version of the process administered by Bureaucrats. As a separate process from WP:DR, how could the current recall process be standardized for use as a mandatory process? Who would be responsible for such a process?

  • Response: a mandate of 2 years after which all administrators should face some standard "judging" of their achievements, errors, civility and diplomacy is a good idea. This should take the form of posting a standard "profit and loss" account followed by a short period of question and answer ( say six weeks), where editors can express their opinions and comments after which a panel of Bureaucrats would decide if the individual should keep admin status or not.

D3. 44 editors criticized the recall process for being too open to abuse, both through spurious or bad-faith calls for an admin to be recalled, or through administrators who fail to follow through on a commitment to stand for recall. How can the recall process be amended to address these concerns?

  • Response: ...

D4. Some editors recommended that administrators be required to stand for some form of reconfirmation after a given period of time. How would such reconfirmation be structured? How long would an admin have before such reconfirmation would be required? Could such reconfirmation be triggered by an effort to recall an admin, and how would that be handled? What form would such reconfirmation take (RfA, Straw Poll, etc)?

  • Response: a mandate of 2 years after which all administrators should face some standard "judging" of their achievements, errors, civility and diplomacy is a good idea. This should take the form of posting a standard "profit and loss" account followed by a short period of question and answer ( say six weeks), where editors can express their opinions and comments after which a panel of Bureaucrats would decide if the individual should keep admin status or not.

Overall Process[edit]

E1. The earliest version of the RfA policy states that adminship is granted to "anyone who has been an active Wikipedia contributor for a while and is generally a known and trusted member of the community."[1] Current policy leaves the definition of a "trusted editor" to the community. Editors offered a wide range of basic characteristics desirable of administrators, including Trustworthiness, competence, and communication skills. How could the RfA process be amended to either A) more fully ensure that editors selected as admins do indeed have the full trust of the community, or B) more fully fit the community's expectations for administrators?

  • Response: a) editors seeking admin status need to be civil, diplomatic and most importantly should not have engaged in destructive edit wars. They need to show that they have worked for the community to improve the project rather than to inflate their ego; the RfA process needs to be structured to make it clear that the prospective administrator has in the past used constructive argument and tact to make their point rather than shouting loudest.

b) The community's expectations for administrators should be made clear. At the moment they are fuzzy. Not all administrators can do all things - they need to concentrate their efforts where they can do most good. The RfA process should determine what the individual has to offer to the project as an administrator as well what the project needs from new administrators. The community can then judge an individual's capacity to fulfill the need. E2. Editors expressed concern over the format of the Requests for Adminship process. Some suggested that RfA has become a form of high-impact editor review, while others expressed concern over the view of Adminship itself as a goal or "trophy" that all editors should attain after a certain period of time. In taking the RfA process as a whole, what elements work well? What elements should be removed or amended?

  • Response: what make an administrator rather than a simple editor is what the individual can do for the project with the tools he or she gains. The RfA process as a whole should demonstrate that the individual will use the tools to improve the project. Consensus is the basis for the project and so the individual needs to demonstrate that the tools will be used to create consensus rather than conflict and to preserve the consensus which is already present. It is not the quantity of contributions which is important but the quality and an administrator should have a clear idea of what they will contribute and how. The current process favours those who can crunch the numbers in terms of what they have done - number of edits, number of pages created etc but doesn't emphasize what they will achieve in the future.

Once you're finished...[edit]

Thank you again for taking part in this review of the Request for Adminship process.

Your responses will be added to Category:Wikipedian Recommendations to RfA Review, which will be used to review the responses after this phase is concluded.

Footnote[edit]

  1. ^ "Requests for adminship". 2003-06-14.

This question page was generated by {{RFAReview}} at 19:21 on 23 September 2008.