If youโve ever been part of a make team or helped at a Contributor DayContributor Day Contributor Days are standalone days, frequently held before or after WordCamps but they can also happen at any time. They are events where people get together to work on various areas of https://make.wordpress.org/ There are many teams that people can participate in, each with a different focus. https://2017.us.wordcamp.org/contributor-day/ https://make.wordpress.org/support/handbook/getting-started/getting-started-at-a-contributor-day/, we need your eyes and expertise to help our newest contributors.
In support of WP Credits and this yearโs goals, a few of us have started building an on-ramp for our contributor pipeline: Pathway Guides for evergreen contributions, and a Good First Issues board for one-off tasks across the project. Weโd like to officially launch at WordCampWordCamp WordCamps are casual, locally-organized conferences covering everything related to WordPress. They're one of the places where the WordPress community comes together to teach one another what theyโve learned throughout the year and share the joy. Learn more. Europe in June, and we need help leveling up before that.
โWeโre tackling this now because there is a huge gap in showing up and contributing. Weโve not made it easy. We need to simplify things for folks so people can get to impactful contributions, quickly. This will lead us to folks sticking around, and hopefully being the next big thing in the project.โ โMary Hubbard
Any new contributor hits the same walls: onboarding info is scattered, pathways arenโt clear, messages go unanswered in SlackSlack Slack is a Collaborative Group Chat Platform https://slack.com/. The WordPress community has its own Slack Channel at https://make.wordpress.org/chat/, and good work sometimes stalls in review. Teams want help, but weโre losing people at the door. Hundreds of student contributors from WP Credits made this impossible to ignore. So letโs make this better for everyone.
Pathway Guides
Weโve identified several evergreen contribution patterns in WordPress. For each one, weโve written a scannable guide that covers the steps involved and links to the right resources. This collection maps contribution opportunities across the project in one place.
How to help:
- Test: walk through a guide and note anything that doesnโt work or is confusing
- Draft: pick an open request, draft a guide, and submit a PR
- Make it better: help improve the design and UX
This project growing in a community-owned repository so every team can help. Guides map to handbooks rather than duplicate them, and feedback from guides flows back to teams for handbook improvements.
Good First Issues
Good first issues are specific one-off items that folks can pick up, finish, and close. Theyโve always existed in our repos, but until now, they were hard to find and track. A new Good First Issues board automatically collects new and updated Good First Issues from repositories across the project. Since we canโt automatically import old issues, we need your help populating this board.
How to help:
- Connect your repo if itโs not already listed in the README
- Close or update any stale Good First Issues
- Follow up on any GFIs awaiting reviews
- Invite new contributors by using the Good First Issues tag and including context
Spread the Word
Tell your teams and meetups about this work. More eyes and more experiences will make this better. And if you can work with students directly, consider applying to become a WP Credits mentor.
The sooner we can get guides tested and issues cleaned up, and the healthier our Good First Issues are, the stronger this is at WCEU. PingPing The act of sending a very small amount of data to an end point. Ping is used in computer science to illicit a response from a target server to test itโs connection. Ping is also a term used by Slack users to @ someone or send them a direct message (DM). Users might say something along the lines of โPing me when the meeting starts.โ me (Velda) in #core-program with questions or ideas for how to move this forward. Thank you for your eyes, thoughts, and any time you can share.
Props @peiraisotta, @karenalma, @annezazu, and @karmatosed, and @4thhubbard for reviews, to the many who have reviewed individual guides, to @mosescursor and @fellyph for contributing to guides, and to @clk87, @marutim, and @kel-dc for getting this started with me.
