Workgroups: Difference between revisions
From Salish Sea Wiki
Pcereghino (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
Pcereghino (talk | contribs) mNo edit summary |
||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
suppresserrors=true | suppresserrors=true | ||
</DynamicPageList> | </DynamicPageList> | ||
|style="width:50%;vertical-align:top;"| | |style="width:50%;vertical-align:top;padding:0px 20px;"| | ||
===Tribal=== | ===Tribal=== | ||
<DynamicPageList> | <DynamicPageList> |
Revision as of 20:57, 19 June 2013
Workgroups are collaborative communities, often within an organization that complete efforts
- Salish Sea References
- Ecology Shoreline Photography Viewer
- The Encyclopedia of Puget Sound provides a peer reviewed version of the wiki
- PRISM Project Search
- Washington Coastal Atlas
- UW River History Project
- Wiki Rules
- Wiki text does not reflect the policy or opinion of any agency or organization
- Please adhere to our social contract
- Complain here, and be nice.
Workgroups are people who work together to achieve shared goals. From large institutions to small organizations to loose communities. Workgroup pages might tell about workgroup efforts, but as an effort produces valuable information it may be useful to develop an effort page. When a workgroup product, helps another workgroup save work, it becomes a resource. Workgroups that develop a large portfolio here might create an acronym category to flag its efforts and products.
Here are some useful things it might be nice to know about workgroups:
- What is their source of their funding (and for government workgroups, their authority).
- How many people involved in each workgroup.
- What is the area they work in, and links back to significant efforts.