User:Luccagenes/Sandbox/ResearchWikiMainPage

Help Central
This page provides access to the Help Central Research Wiki knowledge base. It is designed to quickly direct users toward finding the answers to their questions and to finding information resources that will aid in their research.

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Could a function like Help Central be beneficial to all the aspects of the Research Wiki or would it be better to just concentrate on the "wiki help files" aspect or are there no advantages to using it whatsoever?

Phase 1: Starting a project
"Research methods" can cover how to get started in genealogy from collecting family info, getting organized, choosing and using software, checking on-line sources, to collecting information in the field.

Phase 2: Learning from others
Notes: This is all just going through a thought process to try to find advantages and disadvantages to see if Help Central would be useful in this application.

Help Central could not add to the existing knowledge base currently available and the navigational aspects are readily accessible and work quite well as they are now. Help Central would be an alternative means in a centralized location to navigating through the system. It may be able to reduce a few "clicks" to get to where you want to be; for instance, a single scroll table listing all countries, sub-groups of regions, sub-groups of states/provinces, and sub-groups of countiesand their equivalents in other countries, and possibly sub-group of cities (the break down by cities may be more useful on the counties pages). The large indexed scroll table could be manually searched or searched using the browser "find" function to quickly look up specific locations.

The full (everything there) list for all the world's cities would provide a quickly searchable index to get pointed in the right direction. After finding the city one is looking for then they could scroll upward through the table to find the closest sub-group that has a link.

'This might be workable since no keyword pages would be involved as existing pages could be linked where appropriate (e.g., the state of MN, the county of Isanti, the country of Italy, the region of Toscanna or Tuscany, Italy, the city of Lucca, Italy). The only thing that would have to be done is the construction of the actual list (a working scroll table is already made) and then over time attach the links. My 50 year old Atlas has lists of all the cities names but I'm sure this could be easily be constructed using copy/paste from Internet sites; it could even include towns that no longer exist (ghost towns), previous names as countries newly form or change their names, and so on and so on.  Multiple language forms of the names (Toscanna, Tuscany) could be included as well (and therefore would be searchable). You might (maybe) would need a different index list for each language (due to the size of a co-mingled list) but that too is not impossible.'

'Using a scroll table in combination with the "find" function would also eliminate the click - scroll page -find link - click - scroll page - find link - click maneuvers currently necessary to navigate several pages. A minor time saver but may be appreciated since the table could be scrolled with the mouse wheel, the nav bar, or the scroll slider.'

See if there is a wikitext searchable table or if the "find" function would have to be used. Remember this is just a thought process.

"Research assit" could become the workhorse for the wiki site as the entry point for visitors (new and seasoned) wishing to identify available sources of information during their search. It could provide a series of scroll tables (and interactive maps) for pinpointing the area where the user's interests are currently focused in their research. Scroll tables would include a "world countries" then a "state or regions" scroll table ultimately leading to a specific information (keyword) page.

Each page would provide another scroll table for "counties and cities" which could link to the appropriate resources page already contained within the Research Wiki. Related article links for the selected areas would also be available from said information (keyword) page in addition to the scroll table index list. The objective of Help Central would be to get the user to that specific page in less than five clicks from when they entered the system.

Design Note: Due to the enormous amount of data that could potentially be addressed in a project of this magnitude, the initial idea of 3 consecutive scroll tables would result in tens of thousands of keyword pages. By incorporating the third scroll table (counties and cities) into each of the final keyword pages that are the outcome from two consecutive indexed lists (scroll tables) the resulting system would be significantly easier to construct and maintain but would still maintain its advantages (5 click rule) and its ease of navigation for the new users. Currently existing pages within wiki could be used as the link to the final scroll table (such as a counties project).

Better yet, the initial index list could be countries with a subdivision by regions (states) for each country which would eliminate one scroll table. The second scroll table could be the province or county with subdivisions of villiages and townships and cities. Stil thinking about this.

Phase 3: Giving back
"Research input" would include links to help the contributors access the wiki help files and coursework related to using the wiki and creating and editing articles  It would also be designed as an aid if the user is looking for a specific answer (similar to the Family Tree section of Help Central) or if looking for a regimented learning center is the prefered method for a new contributor. Areas of training would include Manual of Style type training for page and article formats, contributor use of the rich editor and wikitext coding, and finally beginner to advanced HTML and wikitext coursework.

It could also highlight the purpose and role of the Research Wiki, its communities, and its goals toward the continuation of the collection and organizing of genealogical information and resources.

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Misc.
Scroll index # 1

Countries &gt;

Regions &gt;

Provinces/States  &gt; links to state pages

Scroll index # 2 (on each state page)

counties &gt;links to county pages

cities

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