Template talk:ToApprove

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Four editors have agreed to approval please contact the constables to process this approval constables@citizendium.org.| or when four editors have agreed to the approval This is news to me. I think I get the idea that as long as we have three we can consider it approved by the date, but taking an immediate action after a fourth enters the picture has not been discussed as far as I know. If I were the constable, I would ignore that part of the template because our rules currently do not address that. Do we want to change the rule, or change the template? --Matt Innis (Talk) 12:23, 27 April 2007 (CDT)

That is the question. I think this is probably a topic for the constables to hash out. What do you want? Chris Day (talk) 14:41, 27 April 2007 (CDT)
To me it seemed an easy addition to the approval process. If more than one editor approves of an article she or he now can add his name to the approve template. The approval of nan article based on only ONE editor when more are active seems a bad (science) thing to do. SO why confuse things and in stead allow editors to add their name to the template?
It seems clear to me that the moment 4 editors agree an article is to be approved nothing should be able to stop that approval. Provided none actually was a participant other then minor textual edits. No need to scroll through text and sometimes even archive pages to see if the article is worth of being approved.
Make live easier not more difficult. The chabnce to have 4 active editors agreeing in the formal peer review as used by JACS, PNAS is low - when it happens we in CZ should award that unity among editors and approve (as constables and as CZ). My reason to ask Chris to add names is in this reasoning I followed.
Better practical then not useable. Robert Tito |  Talk  15:09, 27 April 2007 (CDT)

I like adding the names, that is great and handles the 'ducks in a row' problem. It is adding the "4th editor" that makes for an automatic approval. It is an interesting idea that deserves discussion, but we may be putting the horse before the cart and adding confusion to a process that editors are already having trouble understanding by not stating it in the Approval Process instructions. In the states, we call it KISS, "keep it simple stupid". If you like the concept, go ahead and change the CZ:Approval Process page and I'll be glad to work with it. --Matt Innis (Talk) 15:23, 27 April 2007 (CDT)

what I proposed doesnt violate the rules for approval, it merely makes the process easier to follow, a 'copper' can see how many editors have approved (1-2-3-4) no more delving in text to find info. IMHO if 4 editors say approve - it should have to be approved stante pede. The template can accommodate that now - so I suggest: lets see how easy this will make the process.

KISS

dumb and dumber well how dumb can you make it, I prefer easy :) In all practicality, 4 editors approving means A shipload of editors I dont see that happening soon but yes I do think and feel 4 approve means auto approve. Why else have editors if these experts cannot approve en-bloc?? Robert Tito |  Talk 

I'm not sure that I can discuss policy here, but for accuracy sake, the template does not reflect our current system. That is all that I am saying. I may or may not agree with your line of thinking, I don't know because I haven't put that much thought into it. I suggest that we bring it up on the CZ:Approval Process discussion page when you write the new rule:-) But until then, we should strive to make the template reflect the rules. --Matt Innis (Talk) 15:40, 27 April 2007 (CDT)

how many is enough

let me ask another question: how many editors that approve an article are enough to approve an article? If one can be enough in some cases then what finalizes that approval process from an editor point-of-view. 4, 10, 100 never or does it depend upon a constable. The rules should reflect the common rule of peer-reviews. three are asked if they agree it is approved. Why not use the same rule and say, three makes the approval at the approval date final BUT when the 4th approval enters the list - thats final. No more needed - all doubts are removed. If the rules do not reflect that scientific communality I wonder what is wrong, scientists or science in general or the rules. Robert Tito |  Talk  16:09, 27 April 2007 (CDT)

On paper that sounds really good, but here is what really happens. Editor 1, 2 and 3 have been going back and forth and are finally happy with the article and put up the ToApprove tag. Then authors 1,2 and 3 show up and start making suggestions and notice that there are some "minor" things wrong so they make some changes, but editor 1 is not happy with that - but he doesn't remove his name, he just starts making his arguments for changing things back. The way we are set up now, the editors can agree to extend the date until everyone is happy again, but with your thinking, now a fourth comes along and says "yes" approve it. Next thing you know, the three editors are stuck with an article they didn't approve. If we used this template on Life/Draft, it would have been approved long before it was because there were always 4 editors there, but not at the same time. They may need that time for all to assess the changes. Why are we in such a hurry? --Matt Innis (Talk) 22:09, 27 April 2007 (CDT)

  • actually not, because AFTER the toapprove template has been placed only those additions that are approved by editors and start on the talk page can and may be added. ToApprove indicates a nearly steady-state with only minor changes. Your argument loses validity due to that. Using the max of 4 editors needed for approval can improve the process as far as speed is concerned. It need not chenge the process as process at all as that is not the case. Topping the number of editorial approvals and linking it to an approved state seems a natural thing to do. Why else ask editors for approval in the first place - as process step I mean. If editors cannot decide by (lets say) 4 to approve an article the whole concept of editorial guidance is based upon quicksand. Robert Tito |  Talk  10:41, 28 April 2007 (CDT)

The whole process of editorial decisions are always a matter of judgement, as is true in any peer reviewed journal, and periodical and any book publishing business in the world. I have no trouble with this template modification- WITH ONE PROVISO, that if 4 editors approve and the article is approved this is what happens: the constable freezes the version at the 4th editor sign on and creates a draft. The nominating editor then works directly with the approvals management editor to come up with a proofed version of the approved article that will be inserted using sysop privileges. Any disputes over the copyediting will be settled among the approving editors by the approvals management editor. If constables are unsure of whether or not to approve the article, because of confusing discussion on the talk page, they can contact me and the nominating editors. This can all be done fairly and openly with communication . One thing must be clear- all 4 editors must be in the articles' workgroup. I think its fine to leave the template as is as a trial. We do not have enough editors in most workgroups to actually see how this will work, but it may well - eventually- be an asset, especially in approving revised approvals after an approved version of the article has been established. Nancy Sculerati 11:47, 30 April 2007 (CDT)

I think we should start regularizing discussion here. Particularly if this discussion is held to have any possible consequences about CZ policy, it would be better to place in the Forums, and then to post a link to the discussion on cz-editcouncil and, perhaps, citizendium-l.

As to Rob's question, "how many editors that approve an article are enough to approve an article?" I note that it is ambiguous. If he means to ask what the facts about our policy right now are, either one editor, or three editors (not four) are required, depending on the situation. It's all pretty clearly described on Approval Process. That's the policy. But if Rob means to ask how the policy should be changed, that is another question, which for now I leave in your hands for purposes of discussing at least.

Nancy, if you wish to change the approval process in any way--so that your approval is required for example--that must be discussed. It isn't in Approval Process, so it's not (yet) policy. Soon we will have a fancy new method for proposing and getting new changes approved (I'm about to add that to the wiki), and you of course would be very much welcome to drive the process of change/refinement before the Editorial Council. --Larry Sanger 20:43, 30 April 2007 (CDT)

article's workgroup

Many articles have multiple workgroups they reside under, allowing the editors of all workgroups the article belongs to to participate in the approval process. Robert Tito |  Talk  11:59, 30 April 2007 (CDT)

Yeah, that we have to hammer out, go through the first one with two separate groups of editors. Take a look at my talk page, Greg Woodhouse has just brought up an example Graph coloring that he thinks is properly both Computers and Math. I'll put on the [1]board tomorrow. I think that it should be the editors' choice. Like I said on my talk page, Richard Jensen has been very restrictive in what he wants as History Workgroup, and as he has been spear heading that workgroup at present I think his preference should be respected. It may be that in the future other history editiors will be eager to include subjects he has vetoed as being properly part of the History Workgroup (like historical ships or the "History of Professions and Academic Disciplines" (he prefers that the History of Physics, for example, be strictly in the Physics Workgroup), and that will be ok if they can handle the extra workload and do a good job without making the approval process derail. As I said, looks like combined Mathematics and Computers articles are now coming up for discussion, with this first example. Your opinion is especially valued there, Rob. Wherever you put it, should you write it out, I may copy it or link it to a project page for Approvals. Nancy Sculerati 14:28, 30 April 2007 (CDT)

restrict

Many restrictions - better deletions - of history on pages made me chuckle. As if he wouldn't have done it I would. It seems to me silly to include history as workgroup on contemporary science pages, if not totally out of place and order. If history wants to write about some science topic from a historical perspective - they are free to do it, but that leaves out mingling of non scientific people on science pages. There is no need for essjay like situations even when done with the best of intentions. Robert Tito |  Talk  14:48, 30 April 2007 (CDT)