Working Groups/Guide

From Open Knowledge Foundation

Jump to: navigation, search

Contents

Introduction

Working Groups (WGs) are at the core of Open Knowledge Foundation's mission.

For the most part, Working Groups aim to:

Working Groups are composed of individual Open Knowledge Foundation Members. Each Working Group has autonomy regarding its projects and activities: responsibility is devolved. For every WG there is a Coordinator who performs basic housekeeping tasks.

Each WG can recruit as many participants as it sees fit, and is responsible for finding and inviting further participants as it progresses.

Working Group Members are encouraged to participate in regular meetings, in which existing work will be reviewed and in which new projects can be suggested. Projects may be proposed to the Project Committee to gain further central support from the Open Knowledge Foundation, or may be directly maintained and developed by the Working Group.

How do I start a working group?

Working Group Membership

Membership requirements

While there are no formal commitments associated with Working Group membership, there is an informal expectation that members will be relatively active in pursuing the group's aims.

Applying to join a Working Group

If you would like to join a Working Group, please contact the working group coordinator via the Mailing Lists mentioning what you do, what you are interested in and how you would like to get involved.

Working Group Meetings

Working Groups will have regular virtual and/or phone meetings. The number of meetings per year will be determined by group members - varying from 2 to 12 per year.

Format and Organization

Working groups can organize their meetings in any way they wish but if a tried and tested set up is described in HowTos/Virtual Meetings.

Working Group Activities

Working Group activities may include:

Getting started

Longer term

Things each Working Group should definitely have:

A coordinator

Who is the main point of contact for the group, who oversees activities, adds new members, and ultimately keeps things moving. The coordinator will be the main (but by no means only!) liaison between the WG and the core OKF team. The Coordinator is responsible for:

A mailing list

The main discussion channel for WG members.

A basic website/blog

At [WG name].okfn.org. E.g. science.okfn.org, or linguistics.okfn.org. This should include:

Suggested website structure

  • 'updates/blog'
  • A short description of the WG’s aims and purpose
  • Link to group page on okfn.org/groups ?
  • with upcoming meetings?
  • Twitter/identica feed with group hashtag
  • A list of all WG members / possibly just with a link to http://okfn.org/groups/{group-name}
  • Minutes from meetings
  • A list of all WG projects
  • A mailing list sign up box
  • Information on how to get involved
  • Contact page - email of group (e.g. {group-name}@okfn.org) plus mailing list link plus link to okfn.org groups page (for posting messages), standard #hashtag
  • Link to wiki page (if has wiki)
  • An OKF Group – at okfn.org/groups/[WG name]. WG members can join this and display a biography, picture, links to relevant URLs, links to other WGs they are a member of, etc. This allow allows WG members to contact each other directly.

An icon

All working groups should have a consistent icon/logo to identify themselves. This could be simple text, but should be uploaded as an image on Flickr.

Things each Working Group may want to have:

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox