On Sat, Feb 4, 2012 at 11:45 PM, Genevieve Afriat <misssou...@live.ca>wrote:

>
>
> > From:  Genevieve2
> > Subject: WikiProject Women's sport+
> Bonjour
> I above all want to thank Laura Hale for his work. My feelings are shared
> for the project Women's sport. At the beginning I believed in a real sports
> Women community. But each is taken in the different sport  (ffotball,
> hockey, ...)and in its region (Australia, England, Canada). Thus there is
> not enough solidarity between us.
>

I've "discovered" this problem too.  From sport conferences and journals,
academic research tends to be sport specific.  There is a conference on
cycling, another conference on association football, a third conference on
Australian rules, a conference on all footy codes in Australia, sport from
the perspective of physical education. Women's sport can be a unifier of
sorts as a topic, but it most often isn't in a context that I can see:
Women's sport joins causes to help promote other women's sport and wider
women's fitness issues.  I've looked at editing patterns on English
Wikipedia regarding this and it bears out.  You don't have editing nodes
joining women's sport.  Rather, women's sport tends to have crossover with
in the individual sport.  (The person editing the Mia Hamm article is going
to be editing other USA soccer articles and maybe soccer articles more
broadly, not articles about women's ice hockey in Canada, or netball in
Australia.)

Disability sport seems to be the one area that gets a fair amount of
crossover across all sports, but even that has its issues because it is
often treated like something completely different, non-notable and not
something average sport fans are interested in. (Completely unrelated,
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:ID_Basketball_ACT_State_Team.ogv is
I believe the first video or pictures of ID basketball on Commons.  Sadly,
no article about it.  The players are men, but the exhibition match was
played during the half time of the women's professional team in Canberra.)




> A male americain contributor caused me many concerns on the Women's ici
> hockey  in the United States.
>

I had a similar problem with an American male and Australian women's sport
articles.  I love being told things like "There is not article about the
sport generally, so this article should be speedily deleted" and the other
fun one of "There is not article about this sport in the United States, so
this article shouldn't exist" or variants on that theme.  If there are no
articles about women's sport in the United States, it might be because
Americans in America are not writing them.  Rather than going after
Australian women's sport content to make it go away, the solution could be
writing article about women's sport in the United States.  (This issue of
American men involving themselves in other country's women sport articles
and claiming they don't matter because not in the USA is hugely
frustrating.  It has happened repeatedly to me.)




> No solidarity of my main Canadian associate (user Maple Leaf) brought me
> towards a resignation: I withdrew from the project.
>

I saw that and it made me sad. :(  I just don't have access to the Canadian
ice hockey sources to make it feasible to really work on them.

If you had a Bachelors degree, I'd strongly support you coming down to my
university to do an Honours, Masters or PhD related to using wikis and
women's sport to promote women's sport at my university.  We have some
fantastic connections.  If there had been money around for me to use, I'd
still have liked to have used it to bring you down here so you can talk to
a few people about some of the things we've done here, show you around our
local facilities, etc. :)



> It would have been fanstatique that the women have a sports gratitude and
> recognition but I believe that it interresse only 1 or 2 persons on
> thousands of contributors, I believe that soon I shall leave Wikipedized.
>

Sad to see that happen :(  The work you do is really good. :)  I sincerely
appreciate it and it delights me to see women working on sport articles in
other spaces than my own.  (Which at the moment tends to be narrowly
confined to Australian and New Zealand women's sport.  I do have a whole
slew of articles at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:LauraHale/Women%27s_sport_country_sections_needing_articles,
which I one day would like to get back to well enough to have them in
the
main article space.)


> I see not many advantages for the Women ice Hockey and for me as the
> reporter in formation. However I shall give some photos (via my wiki
> commons)  of  competitions of Canadian Women ice hockey
>
>
There  are a lot of advantages, though they aren't always the obvious ones.
 I've found it tremendously helpful as a fan to be able to look up articles
about my favourite basketball team individual players during the game.  The
Wikipedia articles are better than the profile in the team's media guide
and the Basketball Australia and WNBL website.  Pictures go a long way
towards helping promote the sport.  Female athletes I've spoken to really
appreciate having articles existing about them, as it helps to validate
their importance as individuals and inside their communities.  It also
helps raise their profile because having a Wikipedia article suggests you
are some one who matters.  Sadly, some of these factors regarding who has
an article and how good is that article often down to who is a "fan" of the
team and athlete and will push for it.

I can tell you it does matter in terms of recruiting women contributors to
articles on their own sport.  Creating and having high level of articles
about women's roller derby in Australia has meant Australian roller derby
leagues come in and try to create, maintain and improve articles about
their teams.  There are enough of us active in this space (probably 4) that
when they do, the existing community can help take these articles to DYK,
find sources to help with notability, find sources to improve the article,
help with formatting, etc.  My experience with the Paralympic community in
terms of female contributors is similar: Higher quality articles that get
attention beget more editors.  Are both groups consistently editing? No.
 Are they necessarily editing beyond their very narrow focus? No.  Are
there contributions still important?  Yes.

When I graduate, I'm really hoping that I can get together the resources
and time to put together either a full fledged academic conference on
women's sport articles and Wikipedia, an industry conference for those
involved in promoting women's sport, or an international conference similar
to GLAM Camp with a focus on women's sport.  (Just don't have the time.
 Going completely nutty as the final days of my dissertation being due get
closer.)  I'd also like to revisit
http://en.wikiversity.org/wiki/UCNISS/Women_and_children%27s_sport_research_centre_proposalat
some point.



-- 
twitter: purplepopple
blog: ozziesport.com
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