I suspect it was just time pressures rather than a conspiracy of silence,
Risker :) I certainly thought it was worthwhile and useful, and would have
been happy to chat about it if you'd asked.

Obviously we need to think about scaling and impact if we want to do more
of it, but I think that's certainly doable (especially if it is part of a
larger strategy for cultural change).

Luis

On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 2:53 PM, Risker <risker...@gmail.com> wrote:

> What it says on the tin.
>
> Even though I was present at Wikimania, I heard very, very little about
> the Ally Skills workshop, even when I asked participants about it.  (In
> fact I don't think I got a straight answer to a single question about it.)
>
> Given the interest about this workshop on this list, and the fact that
> several of us would have liked to attend but had other commitments (whether
> or not at Wikimania), I think many of us would like to hear at least some
> bare-bones feedback about the session.
>
> How many attendees?  Male/female ratio? Key themes? Are any of the
> participants comfortable in saying whether they felt they came away from
> the session with new tools or skills that they feel will be useful?
>
> I'm going to be honest, the silence about this well-supported experiment
> has me very curious.
>
> Risker/Anne
>
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-- 
Luis Villa
Sr. Director of Community Engagement
Wikimedia Foundation
*Working towards a world in which every single human being can freely share
in the sum of all knowledge.*
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