CZ:Approval Process

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See also: CZ:Approvals Committee

A version of a Citizendium article may be nominated as 'citable' by recognised experts within its community. These versions (148 so far) are tentatively declared to be of reasonably high quality and so are placed on subpages of their main articles and locked to prevent further editing. The main articles remain in place for further updates and improvements, and themselves may be approved and replace the subpages. Minor errors in citable articles, such as typos, can be corrected by administrators.

While any member of Citizendium may call for an article to be reviewed for possible approval (add {{subst:Call for review|~~~~}} to its Talk page to do this), the approval process itself must be initiated by members with appropriate recognised expertise.

Approval Process

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Approval process since January 2018

The Citizendium community has put forward an Approvals Committee to oversee the process going forward; all information below is subject to review, except for article (7) of the Policies document:

While all article contributors shall be otherwise equal, there shall be special recognition for subject experts (who shall be individuals with any of: accredited research-level qualifications; three or more peer-reviewed publications; or equivalent practical experience as defined by existing expert contributors), who shall have the final say in any dispute over content, and shall have the right to close a version of a reasonably high quality article to further editing.

Approval process since June 2015

Members of Citizendium voted for a new approvals process in June 2015. Under these rules:

  • An Editor with the appropriate expertise must be involved in any approval;
  • articles can be approved in as little as seven days if there are no objections;
  • Editors may approve their own work, subject to extra restrictions;
  • the Managing Editor may nominate articles for approval or de-approval, subject to restrictions which ensure that an expert is involved;
  • The Council or the Managing Editor may reject nominations, but cannot take the final decision to approve an article without Editor endorsement;
  • Any member of Citizendium may ask the Council or the Managing Editor to intervene over approvals or de-approvals, as well as calling for any article to be reviewed.

Details

The following supersedes any previous approval rules:

A. Eligibility to approve or de-approve

  1. Only an Editor or the Managing Editor may commence the approval process, but a nomination by the Managing Editor must be supported by an Editor.
  2. A general Editor who nominates or supports a version of an article as 'citable' (status 0) must be a member of at least one workgroup in which it has been categorised, while a Speciality Editor must additionally hold their Editorship in a topic relevant to the article (See also 'Categories of Editorship').
  3. Editors may nominate their own work, subject to extra restrictions (see below).
  4. Articles must be 'developed' or already have a citable version to be nominated (statuses '1' or '0').
  5. An eligible Editor or the Managing Editor may nominate an article for de-approval.
  6. The Managing Editor may reject any nomination for approval or de-approval as an interim decision, but must publicly state their reasoning for doing so. This decision can be overturned by the Council.
  7. An Editor or the Managing Editor may withdraw their nomination at any stage.

B. Approval process

  1. Up to three eligible Editors or the Managing Editor nominate an unapproved version of an article (status '1' or '0') as 'citable' (status '0');
  2. Seven days are allowed for comments and objections, or 30 days in the case of Managing Editor nominations, during which time an eligible Editor must support the nomination;
  3. In the event that no other Editor in any of the article's workgroups formally objects to the approval during that time, any administrator may make the appropriate changes to pages, templates and page protection in order to switch the status of the article to citable ('0') and create a locked subpage for the approved version.
  4. Re-approval of another version of the article must undergo the same process as first approval.

C. Objections to approval

  1. In the event of an objection by an eligible Editor, the nomination fails unless a majority of eligible Editors (excluding the Managing Editor) support it. Each objection shall extend the time period for approval by an additional seven days.
  2. The Citizendium Council may block or overturn any approval by vote, as may the Managing Editor via an interim decision; the reasoning behind any rejection must be stated publicly.
  3. Any Citizen may ask the Council or the Managing Editor to intervene over approval.

D. Approval of own work

  1. An Editor may nominate an article including their own substantive work for approval, but the period for comments and objections shall be extended to 30 days, and their support does not count towards the majority requirement in the case of an objection (part C above).
  2. A nomination of own work shall be permitted for one article in any three-month period and no more than three articles per year.

E. De-approval process

  1. An eligible Editor or the Managing Editor may also nominate any 'citable version' of an article for de-approval, and should also state which status the article ought to changed to;
  2. 14 days are allowed for comments and objections;
  3. If no objections from eligible Editors, the Council or the Managing Editor are received after the above 14 days have elapsed, the status of the article is changed and any administrator may make the appropriate changes to pages, templates and page protection to switch the status of the article and remove the subpage.

F. Objections to de-approval

  1. In the event of an objection by an eligible Editor, de-approval fails unless a majority of Editors (which can include the Managing Editor) support it. Each objection shall extend the time period for approvals by an additional 14 days.
  2. The Citizendium Council may support or reject the removal of approval from any version of an article by vote, as may the Managing Editor by an interim decision if they have not nominated the article as Managing Editor.
  3. Any Citizen may ask the Council or the Managing Editor to intervene over de-approval.

Notes

  1. This process respects Citizendium's approval standards, as well as Article 15 and Part II of the Charter.
  2. The process is also designed to defend the nominations of Editors who may no longer be active on the project, by ensuring that any removal must have, at a minimum, the implied endorsement of the Managing Editor.
  3. The number of potential nominations is increased by allowing the Managing Editor to make them, but this must be supported by an Editor in the appropriate workgroup(s). An expert in the general area of the article must be formally involved at some stage.
  4. No specific offices relating to approval need be created or maintained by this process; consequently, the office of 'Approval Manager' is abolished and any duties not assigned via this process absorbed into the roles of Editor or Managing Editor as appropriate.


The following precedes the above rules, and may be out-of-date:

Overview

Developed articles that need editors to evaluate them for approval, articles newly nominated for approval, and the most recently approved articles, will be announced, as time and space allow, on the approvals notice board.

Who may approve an article as 'citable'?

  • For any given topic, only editors who may be considered experts on that topic may approve an article on that topic; at a minimum, these experts must be editors in the article's workgroup.
  • Expert editors may approve articles in either of two configurations: individually or as part of a group.
  • If the article has already undergone an approval and is noted to need typographic corrections, correction of spelling, spacing, or punctuation, that is, a 'bug fix' or proof - this may be carried out by anyone who is an administrator.

Details

Relevant lists of pages are:

Articles that have been suggested for approval. (Waiting for nomination by an editor — if appropriate.)
Articles that are currently nominated for approval. (Will be approved — unless nomination is cancelled.)
Articles that are already citable.

Here, in broad strokes, is how the approval process goes for Citizendium articles (there is a separate approval process for policy (CZ:) pages, which can be approved by the executive committee or a body with delegated authority - see CZ:Approval for CZ pages‎):

  • An article (including subpages like Bibliography, Definition, External links, Related articles) is so well developed that it gives the Citizendium reader a good introduction and overview to its topic. An editor in the article's workgroup will be needed to nominate the article for approval.
  • If the editor has worked on it herself as an author, he/she asks another editor to approve it; or, if there are several editors all doing significant work as authors on the article, then at least three of them can agree to approve it. (These rules are to prevent a single person from approving his or her own work without involving review by experts who were not authors.)
  • So then (one of) the nominating editor(s) fills in the "ToApprove" section of the article's metadata page. That "ToApprove" metadata section will be marked with a date, usually several days to a week from the date that it is placed - but at least 24 hours. (That rule is to allow copy edits and final development. A longer lead time is appropriate for articles that are complex and may need the intensity of scrutiny that occurs with nomination to be properly completed. For articles that are already complete, a short lead time is appropriate.)
  • This metadata section automatically produces nomination announcements on the article page, its Talk: page, etc. It also automatically inserts the article in the list of articles nominated for approval, which can be found at Category:Articles to Approve.
  • If the information in the metadata section remains there until the specified date, approval will occur on that date.
  • Meanwhile, discussion and edits continue on the article. When an article is nominated for approval, this status often draws new eyes to the article, and it can be expected that revisions will occur. In the culture of Citizendium, edits at this stage by novices to the subject are discouraged. The important role for non-experts is to make recommendations and criticisms on the talk page. (This guideline is based on the disruption that is caused by, say, a person who does not know physics well making edits in an article on physics in this "finishing" stage. That person, however, is vitally important in terms of critiquing which parts of the article are clear, and which cannot be followed by a novice to the subject.)
  • If another editor in the article's workgroup finds that the article is so objectionable that approval, in his considered opinion, should not be granted, then the "ToApprove" metadata is removed by this editor, who puts his reasons for this action on the talk page. (This is a fail safe rule, to prevent the approval of articles that are inaccurate or misleading.)
  • If the nominating editor notes that the discussion on the talk page that has occurred since the nomination for approval was originally placed brings up important objections, then the editor may delay the date for approval in the "ToApprove" metadata, to allow for work to continue before the stable version is generated. The nominating editor(s) may also change the version nominated for approval in the "ToApprove" metadata to an updated draft that is considered superior to the one first nominated. (This rule is designed to allow the best version to be the approved one. It is common that articles change quickly in a short time before approval, and so choosing "which version" is an important part of the process)

Unless the metadata is removed, on the designated date, a sysop (a person with "sysop" administrative rights on the wiki) then freezes the approved version of the article on the main article page in a way that will display it under an {{Approved3}} template. At that freeze, a parallel draft form of the article is generated. This draft is not frozen, but is open to edits as are all unapproved articles on the wiki.

When a user calls up the article, the approved (frozen) version appears. At the top of the article is a notice to users who would prefer to write or edit, redirecting them to the Draft page. Work on the article continues on that "Draft" page. Discussion about the article in progress is made on the Talk:Draft Page, and eventually it may be nominated to replace the approved version. Then the procedure repeats.

Addendum: after approval, copyediting may be performed by a nominating editor with the help of the approvals editor. This may occur at any time. (The reason for this rule is that sometimes, even when the article has been religiously scanned for mistakes by many eyes, even a seemingly-obvious mistake - like, say "1-1=2" instead of "1+1=2" - is missed. That sort of error does not require a new approval process to correct.)

When and how to fill in the "ToApprove" metadata

To nominate a version of the article for Approval, an editor should edit the metadata for that article, which is kept on a separate page (in the Template: namespace). To do that, simply go to the article's Talk: page, then either click on the yellow 'M' on the {{subpages}} area, or follow the blue metadata page link above the {{subpages}} checklist; you can then edit the metadata page and fill in the information in the "ToApprove" section, using the following guidelines:

Filling out the "ToApprove" section of the metadata

article url = the specific URL (version number) of the version-to-approve. For instructions on how to find the current version number, see below. For versions other than the current version, go to that revision history page and then copy the URL from the address bar.

subpage url =

cluster =

now = the date and time of the revision that is nominated for approval. Note: this field must be updated every time the Article URL (above) is updated.

ToA editor = the username of the person who did the approval (or who nominated the article on behalf of a group of people). If you are that person, your name goes here. Do NOT use the three tildes (~~~) or four tildes (~~~~) to sign, just enter your user name (e.g. "John Q. Doe" - without the quotation marks), and not a link.

ToA editor2 = second editor (optional but must use before editor3 if only two editors approved)

ToA editor3 = third editor (optional but must use before editor4 if only three editors approved)

date = format Month Day, Year (example: August 15, 2009)

If you have made all the correct replacements, then all the links in the template should appear blue. None should appear red.

If you are using the group editor approval process, each editor should place his/her own name in the appropriate ToA editor space to endorse their approval of the version. Alternatively, make sure the article talk page clearly shows that the each editor approves the version that is placed on the template.

Instructions for finding the current version number

Go to the version of the article that you endorse (usually the last version). Locate the 'tool box' in the left hand column of the article page (see first image below for example). Click 'Permanent link' in the 'toolbox'. The version number is the version that is embedded in the URL address bar at the top of the page (see grayed URL in the second image below, viz., "Step 1 Copy the URL you find in address bar"). This is the URL address that needs to be copied and pasted into the Metadata template at the template location labeled 'article url=' (see grayed text in third image image below, viz., "Step 2 Paste that copied URL into the Metadata template").

Updating the "ToApprove" metadata after revision

If the article undergoes revision during the days following the initial filling of the "ToApprove" metadata (and this is common), and the nominating editor is still willing to approve the article in its revised state, he or she should update the Article URL and the Now field in the metadata section to point at the most recent satisfactory version of the article found under the "history" tab. At any given moment it might or might not be the most recent version. To change it to any version other than the most recent, just choose that particular revision and copy the URL from the address bar above the page. Remember to also update the Now field with the timestamp of that version (find this on the "history" tab). To find the Article URL, see the section just above.

If an article is undergoing group approval, it must be the sense of at least two other editors, in addition to the approver, that the newly-revised version is also worthy of approval.

Involving other editors from a workgroup

  • Discuss your impending approval on the forum for the relevant workgroup(s). This isn't required but it's a good idea.

Involving copyeditors (informally)

  • Post a note to the Copyedit Board on the forums. Not required, but an excellent idea.

Sysops make it official with the 'Approval' template

Anyone with "Sysop" permissions on the wiki -- that is, personnel administrators, constables, and technical staff -- may go through the following steps when initially marking an article as approved. An important exception is that no person with "Sysop" permissions on the wiki who has done any significant work on the article, or who is an editor in any workgroup to which the article is assigned may "do the honors." That means that Editors at work on the article who are also Constables must call another Constable to "do the honors." We thus hold a hard line against appearances of conflict of interest. To ask a Constable to "make it official," simply send an e-mail to constables@citizendium.org. The following steps may be followed on or after the date (and time, if any) given by someone with "Sysop" permissions:

Before beginning the Approval process, open a second page, either to this particular site with the instruction of how to Approve, or to the Constabulary page, where you should open the "Final 10 minutes" Approval instructions—this is so that text from these instructions can be Copied and Pasted in the final steps of the Approval process.


1.) Make sure that the page to be Approved is the latest version approved by the Editor or Editors.

Examine the talk page. Make sure it's clear that there are three editors who are in agreement about the approvability of the article, or, if it seems there is an individual approval going on, make sure that the person approving the article has not worked much on the article. (For that, examine the article's history.) Also ensure that at least one editor currently supports the approval of the article version mentioned in the approval metadata. If there is any reason to doubt editor support, request clarification before doing the honors. Reasons to doubt editor support include the nominated version not being the latest one and/or the existence of unanswered author critiques.


2.) Next do the Metadata:

Go to the article's Metadata page (always update the metadata first or changes won't show for the categories). Change the status to "0".

Type the names of the approving editors from the TofA section into the Approved section of the template just below. Do not put in User: or the brackets or the pipe | line. (In any case, the User, brackets, and pipe | line should NOT be in the TofA section in the first place! If they are, please delete them before going on to the next step so that only the names of the editors are showing.)

Select (highlight) and Copy all the text and fields beginning with cat1 at the very top left down through the date = such and such at the very bottom left. Do not delete this highlighted section!

Once you have done all of the above, then blank all the ToApprove section fields except "article url =", beginning with the line "subpage url =", removing (deleting) only the information, including the two dates, but leaving the names of each of the listed fields. Be sure to leave the information shown on the top line of this area, "article url =", where the http link to the article is stored.

SAVE

Go to the article's Approval sub-page (click the "A" link on the metadata page, a little round button near the top right)

Click edit at the very top of the page.

IF AN EARLIER VERSION HAS ALREADY BEEN APPROVED, AND THIS IS A reAPPROVAL, Paste the new template information below the existing information. You will need to add {{Approval and }} around the new information exactly as below. You do not have to add {{subpages}} for a second time. An example of how this should be done can be found at Gasoline/Approval.

In the blank screen that now appears, Paste the highlighted and Copied text from cat1 down through the date = such and such.

You MAY ALSO have to add {{subpages}}, and YOU WILL HAVE TO ADD {{Approval at the very top left of the page and }} at the very bottom. This is absolutely ESSENTIAL!

When finished, it should look something like this:

{{subpages}}
{{Approval
|           cat1 = Engineering
|           cat2 = Chemistry
|           cat3 = 
|           sub1 = Chemical Engineering
|           sub2 = Environmental Engineering
|           sub3 = 
|           tab1 = 
|           tab2 = 
|           tab3 = 
<!-- Required for ToApprove template: -->
|    article url = http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Gasoline&oldid=100479725
|    subpage url = 
|        cluster = http://en.citizendium.org/wiki?title=Gasoline&oldid=100479725
|            now = April 26, 2009
|     ToA editor = David E. Volk
|    ToA editor2 = 
|    ToA editor3 = 
|           date = May 10, 2009
}}

SAVE


3.) FOR NEW APPROVALS: Create the Approved Article and the Draft pages:

Go back to the "Main Article" by clicking on the link to it at the top left of the page.

Check to see if the article includes the WP content disclaimer at the bottom of the page. If it does, then you need to remember to check the WP content box on the page you are about to create.

Find the approved version of the article named in the /Approval page by clicking on the "History" tab of the article. Click the date and time entry.

Click "Edit" and copy the entire contents of the page.

Go back to the main article and type "/Citable Version" at the end of the article's URL in your browser and go to that page. Make sure to use capital C and V. If the article name is "XYZ", the full url that you need to reach is http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/XYZ/Citable Version.

Paste what you have copied (i.e. the approved version of the article) into the new page and SAVE. You should now see that there is a 'Citable Version' tab in the banner of the page.

Click "Protect" and lock the /Citable Version page to prevent further edits or moves.

An interim measure, necessary to reveal the Talk page, is to move it from Talk:XYZ to Talk:XYZ/Draft. This is necessary until most approved articles have been switched over to citable versions.



3A.) FOR reAPPROVALS: Create the Approved Article:

Go to the article's Approval sub-page (click the "A" link on the metadata page, a little round button near the top right)

Click the link that begins with the words "the version dated" and includes a date. This will take you to the version of the article that is to be approved.

Click on the edit tab. You may see a warning stating "WARNING: You are editing an out-of-date revision of this page. If you save it, any changes made since this revision will be lost." Or you may see a warning stating "WARNING: This page is xxx kilobytes long etc." Ignore either warning. Select and copy the entire contents.

Paste the contents of the previous page into the XYZ page by following the steps below:

  • A.) Go back one page, using the Esc. button (or the return arrow)
  • B.) Click on the <XYZ link near the top left of the page in small fonts
  • C.) Click on Edit
  • D.) Delete the entire text (which is the old approved version),
  • E.) Then Paste the contents of the new version to be approved into this page.
  • F.) If you noted earlier that the article contains WP content, ensure that the "Content is from Wikipedia?" box below the edit box is checked.

SAVE


4.) Insert the Talk page divider:

Go to the Main Article, XYZ. Click on Talk.

Then insert this template at the bottom of the Talk page in order to separate the "before-approval" article discussion from the "after-approval" discussion.

Click on Edit

Then create the header by Copying and Pasting from either the instructions on this page or from the instructions on the Constabulary page:

==APPROVED Version 1.0==

onto the very bottom of the Talk page

Beneath this new header, then Copy and Paste the text below:

<div class="usermessage plainlinks">Discussion for Version 1.0 stopped here. Please continue further discussion under this break. </div>

AND make sure that you remove the {{subst:Call for review|~~~~}} on an article's talk page. If an Editor or a Approval Manager supports this suggestion, then Editors and main authors may leave their referee's report on the Approval subpage of the article, and an Approval Manager finally decides whether these reports suffice to approve the article.

Process used until 2011

The provisional nature of this process

This process is provisional and probably temporary in this form. The use of templates, in particular, may be regarded as a temporary stopgap measure. Eventually, we will want to integrate certain procedures into the software itself. But it is actually desirable to test out the process first "by hand" before stabilizing it in code.

Who may approve

For any given topic, only editors who may be considered experts on that topic may approve an article on that topic, at a minimum, these experts must be editors in the article's workgroup.

Expert editors may approve articles in either of two configurations: individually or as part of a group.

Individual approval. Editors may approve articles if they have not contributed significantly to the article as an author. In other words, if an editor reviews an article that is fully developed by others, perhaps an author, he or she may suggest changes or even add edits, but strictly in the role of an editor. In this way, there is a kind of peer review. No single editor may approve an article that this individual editor actually authored. In other words, no editor may approve his or her own work singlehandedly.

Group approval. If there are three editors, all of whom are expert in the topic of an article, and all of which have been at work on an article as authors, then any one of them may approve of an article with the concurrence of the other two.

An author may trigger the approval process simply by writing a note to several relevant editors, drawing attention to the page, or by contacting the current approvals manager. The responding editors may then approve according to the same rules above.

If the article has already undergone an approval and is noted to need typographic corrections, correction of spelling, spacing, or punctuation, that is, a 'bug fix' or proof - which commonly occurs with version (1.1), then one-editor approval is acceptable, as long as these copyedits are carried out with one of the original editors who nominated that article for the just approved version (1.0). Copyedits are carried out with the sysop aid of approvals management.

Developed articles that need editors to evaluate them for approval, articles newly nominated for approval, and the most recently approved articles, will be announced, as time and space allow, on the approvals notice board.

Related pages

  • Category:Articles to Approve - automatically generated list of articles nominated for approval
  • {{Approval}} - template to mark an approved article, used on the article's /Approval page


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