Much like article content, the English Wikipedia's help pages have grown organically over the years. Although this has produced a great deal of useful documentation, with time many of the pages have grown overwhelmingly complicated, especially for new users. The number of pages and links has become difficult to manage also, for example there are at least four pages about tables (plus more on other sites) with it being unclear which is most suitable for a given problem.
Wikipedia's help pages are of varying complexity, from basic introductions to technical documents. This variety however has its flaws: it is easy to navigate to a page that contains concepts that have not already been covered, or is overly complicated for one's needs.
For some idea of the scale of the problem, the main help landing page (
Help:Contents) now gets around 10,000 hits per day. Although it has undergone a number of revisions over the years, anecdotal evidence suggests that its current form is not proving very useful, either to new or experienced editors. Improving this and other key help pages could have significant benefits for editor recruitment and retention.
Reasons for the fellowship
There are already ongoing community efforts to improve the help pages, such as the excellent
Help Project and
WikiProject Usability. However it was felt that because of the importance of this work, it would benefit from additional support. There were also opportunities to make use of Wikimedia Foundation resources e.g. to perform usability testing and implement better feedback systems, plus a degree of overlap with existing fellowship projects such as the
Teahouse.
Identify issues with the current help pages on the English Wikipedia, and what could be done to improve them
Identify critical use cases that should be addressed by help pages
Co-ordinate community discussion
Generate new content and/or designs for a number of key help pages
Perform usability testing of old and new pages
Provide a basis for this work to be carried forward, both on English Wikipedia and on other projects
What the fellowship would not do
Impose new pages by fiat. After testing all changes will be up for community discussion (although obviously we hope to come up with changes that are popular and backed by evidence!)
Change the content of policy pages such as NPOV, Verifiability etc.
Fix everything! As stated, there are a vast number of help pages and the aim of this project is to focus on a number of key ones, plus the navigation between them. It is hoped that the lessons learned and the structures established in this fellowship can be taken forward for continuing improvements by the community.
Overall goals
Identify some of the current issues with help pages, and use cases they should seek to address
Develop new content, designs and navigations for a selection of key help pages, and use testing to determine whether they are improvements on the current pages
Co-ordinate with the community to implement these improvements
Wrote a script to get regularly updated statistics on help pages, including views, word counts and readability scores -
Wikipedia:Help Project/page statistics. These have proved invaluable in targeting the most important pages and prioritising work.
Ran a substantial survey of Wikipedia editors (with various numbers of edits) to learn more about what topics they look for help on, where they look for help, and how useful they find it. Results and findings at
Wikipedia:Help Project/June 2012 survey.
Attended Wikimania in Washington DC, gave
a presentation on the work conducted up to this point and plans for the future. Also conducted many informal discussions with staff and community members.
(The design and templates pioneered in these tutorials were also later used by another editor for a redesign of
Wikipedia:Contact us, and it is hoped they will be employed further in the future.)
Making use of the previous research and feedback, as well as help from Wikimedia Foundation designers, created a redesigned version of
Help:Contents (currently at
Help:Contents/B) to better serve readers and editors.
Conducted
remote usability tests pitting the existing version of Help:Contents against the redesign, and refined the new design according to findings. The new design was preferred by all testers, and some were able to complete tasks with it that they were unable to on the old page.