[Chat] Collecting general feedback about the conference?
elvis
elvis at dogonfire.com
Wed Jan 25 20:46:36 AEDT 2017
Really you just need a moderator to take feedback, anonymous or not, and
give it to the speaker in a form that is useful. Like a report card.
Filters out nasty comments and other unhelpful feedback.
On 25/01/17 17:08, Michael Lake via Chat wrote:
> Hi all
>
> I'm generally in favour of a talk rating system but it would not be nice to have a system whereby the rating of all speakers is public knowledge.
> Some speakers would be at the bottom of the barrel. That's good for the organisers to have but not to be made public just out of courtesy.
>
> One could though also have a public rating system of the top, say 10 talks. That way the bottom of that list is still being rated amount the top 10% of all talks.
>
> Having a way to have private non-anonymous or anonymous feedback to the speaker, either good or suggestions for improvement, is fraught with ethical problems. It would be good to provide a way for attendees to provide feed back but we can't have a system whereby people can just heap shit on some speaker anonymously. It's a difficult problem to solve.
>
> Mike Lake
>
> ________________________________________
> From: Chat [chat-bounces at lists.lca2017.linux.org.au] on behalf of Tim Serong via Chat [chat at lists.lca2017.linux.org.au]
> Sent: Wednesday, January 25, 2017 3:56 PM
> To: chat at lists.lca2017.linux.org.au
> Subject: Re: [Chat] Collecting general feedback about the conference?
>
> On 01/24/2017 09:24 PM, Jan Groth via Chat wrote:
>> First of all: I had a great time in Hobart and would very much like to
>> thank everyone who participated and contributed to the conference!
>>
>> After Geelong 2016 this was my second Linuxconf, and it's probably
>> only natural to compare the two events:
>>
>> While 2017 certainly was a good conference, I must say that I found
>> 2016 far more relevant for me. That is more talks about topics that I
>> consider interesting and relevant, and fewer talks about topics that I
>> didn't manage to connect to.
>>
>> I'm sure that others have a different perception - which is perfectly
>> fine - but I was wondering if there are channels to collect this kind
>> of feedback (ideally in a more systematic and fine-grained way)?
> There's nothing official along those lines for LCA 2017. Some F/OSS
> conferences have wound up with ad-hoc speaker feedback on third party
> sites (lanyrd maybe?) but I'm not sure if that's happened for LCAs or
> not offhand.
>
> From some previous discussions I've had there's at least a few ways
> speaker feedback could potentially be facilitated in future:
>
> - Build a rating thingy into the conference web site, so delegates can
> rate talks (delegates have to remember to rate talks).
> - Same as above, but with a mobile app.
> - Hand out bits of paper at each talk to collect feedback (either "tick
> the boxes", or a simpler "dump red/amber/green pieces of paper in a
> bucket as a hand-wavey quality metric")
>
> The paper based options probably get more feedback from more people than
> the online ones, but are more load on volunteers.
>
>> Taking that idea one step further: For future conferences, would it be
>> worthwhile to collect feedback on a talk / presenter level?
>>
>> * I've seen a few outstanding presentations and certainly wouldn't
>> mind letting the speaker know about it.
>>
>> * I also went to talks where someone presented massive walls of text
>> and simply read out slide after slide after slide in a very monotonous
>> voice. The guy next to me even fell asleep, I'm not making this up.
>>
>> * Sometimes only very small things went wrong, e.g. the presenter
>> typing into the bottom line of a console - which only the people in
>> the front row could see, but everyone else being too polite to mention
>> / yell out.
>>
>> If I was a speaker I would be very happy to receive this kind of
>> feedback and try to improve for the next time.
> Likewise. I really appreciate feedback when I've been a speaker,
> because it helps me in my attempts to improve my presentations.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Tim
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