It’s that time of year again - it looks like we have a new group of Wayne State University students around the site. These students have an assignment to create a new wikiHow article, so you’ll most likely see them as you patrol and boost new articles. As an FYI, it seems many aren’t marking that they are students on their page, and also not necessarily using the {{inuse}} template.

[[Same as the last post - feel free to skip if you’re familiar]] I know many of you have worked with students before and know the protocol, but for those who haven’t seen students around the site before, here’s a little more information:

As students work through their assignment, they will be learning all of the ins and outs of creating a quality article on wikiHow. They should do the majority of the writing, copyediting and formatting to get it to a promotable standard themselves, rather than relying on other editors to do it for them, or pushing for promotion if their articles aren’t ready.

Keeping this in mind, if you come across articles and/or editors that are part of a student group (they often identify themselves on their user pages), there’s a template you can send them to help guide them in the right direction: {{ student }}. This message will give them all the guidelines they need to be successful with their project on wikiHow.

Know that it’s okay to help and edit if you want to, but you are definitely welcome to say no and direct them to the {{student}} resources if you don’t! For students who are mostly getting things right and just need a bit of editing or personal help to nudge them in the right direction, it might be nice to send them a note with a personal touch. They should also keep an {{inuse}} tag on their article until the article is totally ready to go for readers, so feel free to add that for them if they don’t already have it.

There is also a second student template {{ student2 }}, which most won’t need. It’s basically a checklist of issues that might exist if an article hasn’t been published. If someone has been sent the basic resources from the {{student}} message, but respond in ways that show they perhaps haven’t done the work to understand the guidelines, you could send {{student2}}. For example, if someone asks “Why hasn’t my articles passed review” or says “I need my article live by x date”, but there are still significant issues with the article, this message will give them a clear checklist of potential issues they can look out for.

Finally, sometimes the extra influx of new articles can cause some NAB backlog, but I’m confident that working together our group of Boosters will handle the extra - because when all is said and done, the result can be wonderful. We’ve had some great articles created in the past like this , this and this and I’m looking forward to seeing what we get this time around!

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I wish one of my assignments was to write a wikiHow article:stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:Will this add to the backlog on WW as well?

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Would assume it as well. Don’t slap the student template on the welcoming, just give them a friendly hello!

I am not a welcomer so things aren’t accurate on my part

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Interesting! I actually encountered a student the other day:slight_smile:. It took me some time to find the template:stuck_out_tongue:. And yes, writing a wikiHow article as an assignment seems fun!

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You can’t use templates when welcoming on the welcome wagon (a bummer because sometimes I actually need the templates and am not just slapping them with a prewritten message).

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Ah, I thought it was about that time again! I thought I noticed a few student accounts while patrolling:stuck_out_tongue:And that explains why NAB’s at 60+ right now!

It’s totally awesome that one of their assignments is to write an article though. I’d love to show up to class, hear that my homework is to write a wikiHow article, and write one while secretly boosting my classmates’.

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I have a question. When boosters are boosting student articles, if it isn’t ready do they move it to quality review (but then it is out of the NAB so it won’t get reviewed again), or do they provide feedback and give the students more time (and leave it in NAB)?

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One more question, am I allowed to edit student articles?

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Woohoo! I can’t wait to see some new amazing articles come out!

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I think that some articles are demoted and moved out of NAB, but they would usually then contact some boosters or editors to give them some tips, and then we would promote the articles after they meet our standards.

So I believe so:slight_smile:

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I knew it!

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Got it! Thanks so much!

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To add on to Wikia’s answer, all articles are moved out of NAB after a first review. It is either “promoted” or “demoted” - and can have tags added either way. A booster will generally always give the author feedback, so if there are tweaks that need to be made, the author will know. Then once edits are made, it will either publish automatically when the tag is removed (if it was promoted), or they will need to post to the Article Review Team page to have it re-reviewed (if it was demoted). I generally add a note like this to the end of a student article that is demoted so they know:

When you think it’s ready for re-review, feel free to post on the [[wikiHow_talk:Article-Review-Team|Article Review Team page]].

And I’m sure any student would LOVE you to help improve their article, so don’t hesitate to help if you want to! Things like formatting can be a huge help to them, so I’m sure they’d be grateful for the help:slight_smile:

@That21PilotsFan yes, any contributor who makes 5+ edits will go into the WW. You never know, some might decide to stick around after their project is done!

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I know if I was a student doing an assignment on wikiHow, I certainly would:stuck_out_tongue_winking_eye:

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