The biggest strength of a community is also its biggest weakness - its contributors. There have been some excellent questions on Wondir recently - a particularly thought-provoking one on the subject of language marginalisation had me sitting in silence for minutes contemplating my answer (which surely made it a huge benefit for those around me) - but now it seems to have been discovered by high-school students, and has finally begun to suffer from the deadweight of question spamming.
Take for instance the sudden proliferation of questions about radiation and atomic chemistry; the questions are even numbered and are all multiple choice. It is obvious that this is just someone's homework, and it is fairly depressing that I have to battle my way through so many to get to the juicier questions.
The staff at Wondir are now faced with a difficult decision: to moderate or not? Moderation of the boards would be useful for people such as myself - keen to help but put-off by spam and horrendous grammar - and for teachers who might want to use the board as an educational aid. Moderation, though, could be the death of the board; it would remove the spontaneity that is the life blood of the community. If you make someone jump through hoops in order to ask a question, will that person bother at all?
4 comments:
wondir is cool...but i dont think horrendous grammar can ever be eradicated as ling as teenagers are allowed to use it...
honestly it gives us a bad name
wondir is cool...but i dont think horrendous grammar can ever be eradicated as ling as teenagers are allowed to use it...
honestly it gives us a bad name
I know that seems to be the case, but we've just starting to surface a whole army of quality-control tools that can filter, moderate, monitor, block, delete, etc, content that's low quality, with lots more to come. Also, Wondir is just a Live Q&A platform, thus we can change the demographic that flows through it and thus the overall quality of the content simply by partnering with more mature community sites. So far many of our site partners that send traffic are heavy on the teen demographic, and we're seeking to adjust that significantly.
where i get more info?
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