This serves as a guide to thepolicies and guidelines that are generally accepted and considered important — even essential — by the project's founders and community. These help us to work towards our goal:Developingfree,open content textbooks, manuals, and other texts. It is important to note that at least some of these policies are still evolving as Wikibooks grows and develops.
The use of "must", "should", "must not", "should not", and "may" on this page are used consistently withRFC 2119.
AllWikimedia projects share a set ofcore founding principles.
Wikibooks policies and guidelines are formulated for the most part by habit and consensus. This takes place in discussions ontalk pages, theReading Room and theTextbook-lemail list. Once a ground for consensus exists on a topic that Wikibooks would benefit to have as an official guideline or policy, a document is created and discussed in specifics.
To propose a new policy or guideline document, add a new entry to theProposals section below. The page should be in the Wikibooks namespace. Create the new page, add the {{draft}} template and write up the proposal.
So long as the policy is proposed, other users and members may change the text of the proposal to reflect the state of the discussion and compromises about the proposal. After proposed policy has been reviewed and discussed by other users and work on it is considered finished, it may be accepted by community consensus. For specifics about what consensus means, and how it is achieved, see thedecision making guidelines
Even a page which is already an official policy or guideline can be modified to keep it in line with consensus or to make it more coherent. Policies and guidelines are generally open to being edited by any established user, but controversial changes are likely to be reverted. Anyone who thinks there is a problem with an existing policy or guideline is welcome to discuss it. Still, except for non-normative edits, changes must be proposed on the guideline discussion page and accepted by the community perWikibooks:Decision making.
You are a Wikibooks editor. Wikibooks lacks an editor-in-chief or a central, top-down mechanism whereby the day-to-day progress on this instructional resource is monitored and approved. Instead, active participants monitorrecent changes and make copyedits and corrections to the content and format problems they see.The participants are both writersand editors.
Official Wikibooks policies are identified with the {{policy}} template at the top of the page, which includes the page inCategory:Wikibooks policies. The current list of official policies follows:
Official Wikibooks guidelines are identified with the {{guideline}} template at the top of the page, which includes the page inCategory:Wikibooks guidelines. The current list of official guidelines follows:
The following are draft policies and guidelines that still need an official community decision: