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Welcome to Wikipedia with a cup of tea and all your questions answered - at the Teahouse

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By Rcsprinter123
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Submit your project's news and announcements for next week's WikiProject Report at the Signpost's WikiProject Desk.

Although you may not have come across the Teahouse yet, this new project is a bold initiative by the Wikimedia Foundation for welcoming new editors, helping them, and persuading them to stay with the project. Brainstormed on Meta and launched on 15 February this year, the whole concept is a way of helping newer editors and editor retention. Teahouse hosts both invite selected new editors to visit the Teahouse and help out at the questions page to which new editors have been invited. Invited editors become "guests" at the Teahouse with their own profile, just like the hosts. The project was developed with the support of the foundation as a pilot for this type of editor welcoming. Updates and discussion are at the Meta page.

We interviewed users SarahStierch, current Wikipedian in Residence at the Smithsonian Institution Archives, and a Community Fellow for the Wikimedia Foundation, and Jonathan Morgan, a WMF research fellow and a doctoral candidate at the University of Washington; both are designers and concept thinkers for the Teahouse. We also interviewed Writ Keeper, one of the most active hosts.

Teahouse logo

What was the initial idea for the Teahouse? Who came up with the spark and helped develop it into the fully functioning project it is today?

Do you find your experiences working at the Teahouse good fun, or are there times you get a little frustrated and forget the patience needed to work with new users? Do you enjoy yourself generally?

One of the main goals of the Teahouse is to improve editor retention and levels of satisfaction with the community greeting them as they start on the wiki. Based on the data gathered and displayed at meta:Research:Teahouse/Metrics, do you think you are achieving these goals or are they slipping slightly? Expand your thoughts on how you think the project is performing.

Do you feel happy with the attitude exhibited in the main Teahouse forums: Talk:Teahouse, the questions page, maybe even the IRC channel (#wikipedia-teahouse connect)? Do you think the hosts are as friendly as possible with guests, or perhaps that guests are sometimes a bit of hard work on purpose to tire out the hosts. Have you had any problems with trolls at all?

I don't know that we've had any trolls per se, but we've had one or two people who are obviously block-evading socks, only at the Teahouse to vent about the "abusive admins". My strategy has generally to try to engage them on their talk page (with as much
The Teahouse helps new editors be bold with a cup of tea!
good faith as humanly possible) to get them off the main Teahouse pages and avoid their impact on new users; it usually works pretty well. Tiring, though.

Tell us about the most difficult question you've had to answer at the questions page. How tricky was it to explain, or perhaps you didn't know.

How could I get involved, where should I go?

Anything else you'd like to add?

The pilot phase of the Teahouse project ends this month. A report on activities and success metrics will follow.

Get your lightsabers ready for next week's Report. Until then, use the force in the archive.


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  • I frequently meet new users offline, and it is a great comfort to me to know that when I tell someone about Wikipedia I do not have to be their sole guide into the Wikipedia community. Previously I was sometimes shy about even mentioning Wikipedia to some people in some contexts, because everyone knows Wikipedia and everyone always has lots of questions for anyone they meet who calls themselves a Wikipedian! Now I know that when I meet someone and tell them about Wikipedia, I can talk to them only as much as I like and then I can end the conversation by saying, "Wow! You are lucky! There is actually a place on Wikipedia for new users, and they want to answer all your questions! Check out the Teahouse!" This works for the Wikipedia:Ambassador program, at WP:EDITATHONs, any other kind of outreach events, at parties, or anywhere else where people start talking about Wikipedia. This pilot project is off to a great start and I hope it becomes part of the new user experience. Blue Rasberry (talk) 14:27, 15 May 2012 (UTC)[reply]
  • Teahouse is the best and most positive step forward on Wikipedia for some time. It remains to be seen whether it will have the long term effect that is desired, but I think it just might, mainly by acting as a catalyst for social change. Rich Farmbrough, 00:13, 16 May 2012 (UTC).[reply]
  • Very glad to see that the project is still going strong 7 years later! And that it does offer a distinct service from the WP:HELPDESK. Nosebagbear (talk) 12:32, 4 September 2019 (UTC)[reply]



       

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