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Test Chat Summary: December 17th, 2025

On Wednesday, November 19th, 2025 at 04:00 PM GMT+2, <test-chat> started in#core-test facilitated by @sirlouen. The agenda can be found here.

1. Attendance

In attendance was:
@fakhriaz @nikunj8866 @huzaifaalmesbah  @noruzzaman  @sirlouen @oglekler @r1k0 @abduremon @Dhruvang21 @gautammkgarg @mebo

2. Volunteer

Meeting started by explaining Note takers and Facilitators so people can take up the roles.

  1. Note takers are simply people who summarize the happening of the Test Chat and they always publish a test Chat summary like this one here.
  2. Facilitators are simply people that chair or facilitate a test team chat.
    These follow the agenda that is proposed and ensure that every one gets a voice.
    A sample Meeting is like the one held here.

These 2 can be done by the same person in the same instant however we encourage multiple people to do it to increase on the proof reading and collaboration

3. Test Team Discussions

  1. Time to Review/Update the Get Set Up for Testing Page.
  2. Time to Comment Back/Update the Test Team Reps Page.
  3. Update on Test Handbook: New pages for Feature & Enhancement Testing (#90), E2E Testing (#91), and Patch Testing Scrubs (#92) are available; contributors can update content via GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/ issues.
    • @sirlouen got to a conclusion that currently we don’t have enough resources to have the wheel moving
      • all the areas mentioned above require a good thought and a suggestion to expand the team was brought up.
  4. Test Team Training Program & Restructuring Plans for 2026
    • @sirlouen is leading the program.
    • Previously, mentorship was insufficient so now a full training was advised. A program in the test team that will bring in Champions
      • A call for as many people as possible was made. People that will be committed to the program and see it through
    • @nikunj8866 sighted it as a great learning opportunity for anyone who wants to become a future Test Team representative.
      • @sirlouen added that it won’t only make team reps but also Power Members.
    • @sirlouen will pause current Handbook activity in preparation for the program in the next 2 weeks. Announcement made here highlighting the requirements to join and all the information about the program.

4. Open Floor

Image
  • We have introduced a bot that informs of new gutenbergGutenberg The Gutenberg project is the new Editor Interface for WordPress. The editor improves the process and experience of creating new content, making writing rich content much simpler. It uses ‘blocks’ to add richness rather than shortcodes, custom HTML etc. https://wordpress.org/gutenberg/ issues coming for testing. This posts directly in the 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/. channel
    • @sirlouen recommended adding an emoji like this :white_check_mark:  if you are going to be doing the testing report.
    • This helps for quick assignment of tasks and getting them cleared quickly.
    • Here people get a chance to know the tests required and even do them without having to wait for a Patch-testing session.
      • Infact this could also end the patch testing sessions when the new training is implemented
        • With this new notifier, anyone could jump in

5. WordPress Ecosystem Announcements

6. Other Meetings

We usually have 2 meetings held every week. This is the last test-chat meeting for this year and Tomorrow’s patch testing session will be the last for this year.

  • Happy Festivities, See you again Next Year.
  • Happy new Year 2026

#core-test, #fse-outreach-program, #full-site-editing, #gutenberg, #make-wordpress-orgupdates, #web

Week in Test: December 22, 2025

Hello and welcome to another edition of Week in Test, the place where contributors of any skill level can find opportunities to contribute to WordPress through testing. You can find the Test Team in #core-test.

Table of Contents

Calls for Testing 📣

Calls for Testing can originate from any team, from themes to mobile apps to feature plugins. The following posts highlight features and releases that need special attention:

Test Handbook 📘

Merging of Test Handbook in GithubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/

For the last few weeks, a good number of test contributors embarked on the journey of reviewing our new Test Handbook based on GitHub. The Process has been concluded successfully with the merging.

  • We want to inform that the Test Handbook is officially synced. There might be a couple of bugs and things that are not looking good pending to be fixed.
  • Feel free to give it a check here, and if you find any bugs, go to the GitHub repository and report them.
    • You can send a PR with the fix, or simply send the issue, and we will check it

Weekly Testing Roundup 🤠

Bi-Weekly update: Test Team Update

Here’s a roundup of active tickets that are ready for testing contributions. Did you know that contributions to the Test Team are also a fantastic way to level up your WordPress knowledge and skills? Dive in to contribute, and gain coveted props 😎 for a coming release.

1. WordPress CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. Testing

a. Patch Testing 🩹

Who? All contributors (not just developers) who can set up a local testing environment. Why?
It is necessary to apply proposed patches and test per the testing instructions in order to validate that a patch fixes the issue.

The following tickets (4) have been reviewed and a patch provided, and need testers to apply the patch and manually test, then provide feedback through a patch test report:

b. Bug Reproduction

It is necessary to confirm if the bug is happening under multiple conditions and environments, using the bug reproduction report in order to validate the issue.

The following tickets (204) have been reviewed and milestoned, and need testers to check the instructions and manually test if the issue is reproducible, the provide a bug reproduction report:

c. Handbook Review

Here are the current activities being discussed in the Test Handbook:

  1. We need to review https://github.com/WordPress/test-handbook/pull/98
  • Test Team Discussions
    • Time to Review/Update the Get Set Up for Testing Page.
    • Time to Comment Back/Update the Test Team Reps Page.
    • Update on Test Handbook: New pages for Feature & Enhancement Testing (#90), E2E Testing (#91), and Patch Testing Scrubs (#92) are available; contributors can update content via GitHub issues.

2. GutenbergGutenberg The Gutenberg project is the new Editor Interface for WordPress. The editor improves the process and experience of creating new content, making writing rich content much simpler. It uses ‘blocks’ to add richness rather than shortcodes, custom HTML etc. https://wordpress.org/gutenberg/ Testing

👋 Want to contribute to WordPress/Gutenberg? If you have a bug or an idea, read the contributing guidelines before opening an issue. If you’re ready to tackle some open issues, we’ve collected some good first issues for you.

a. Gutenberg Bug Reproduction Testing

The following tickets (0) have been filed reporting a known bug and needs testers to manually test, then provide feedback through a bug reproduction report that the issue can be reproduced.

  • Nothing this week

b. Gutenberg Patch Testing

All contributors (not just developers) who can set up a local testing environment.
Why? It is necessary to apply proposed patches and test per the testing instructions in order to validate that a patch fixes the issue.

The following tickets have been reviewed, and a patch provided, and need testers to apply the patch and manually test, then provide feedback through a patch test report:

  • None this week

Profile Badge Awards 🎉

Congratulations to the recipients of the Test Contributor Badge 🎉

  • None this week

– Kindly find the Contribution Guidelines here

Read/Watch/Listen 🔗

Upcoming Meetings 🗓

🚨 There will not be any more  #core-test meetings held in 2025.

2026 Schedule:

Interested in hosting a <test-scrub>? Test Team needs you! Check out Leading Bug Scrubs for details, or inquire in #core-test for more info.

Props to @nikunj8866 @sirlouen for helping review this article and offering feedback

#core-test, #fse-outreach-program, #full-site-editing, #gutenberg, #make-wordpress-org-mobile, #make-wordpress-orgupdates, #test-team-reps

X-post: Test Team Update: 22 December, 2025

X-post from +make.wordpress.org/updates: Test Team Update: 22 December, 2025

X-post: WordPress 6.9 Release Retrospective

X-comment from +make.wordpress.org/core: Comment on WordPress 6.9 Release Retrospective

X-post: Proposal: 2026 Major Release Schedule

X-comment from +make.wordpress.org/project: Comment on Proposal: 2026 Major Release Schedule

Team Chat Agenda: 17th December, 2025

Here is the agenda for the upcoming Test Team Chat scheduled for Wednesday, 3rd December 2025 at 16:00 GMT+2, which is held in the #core-test Slack channel. Lurkers welcome!

Agenda

Leave a Comment

  • Do you have something to propose for the agenda?
  • Can’t make the meeting, but have a question for the Test Team?

If any of the above apply, please leave a comment below.

#core-test, #full-site-editing, #gutenberg, #make-wordpress-orgupdates, #web

Test Team Training Program & Restructuring Plans for 2026

At present, the Test Team operates with limited active resources, and a significant portion of the workload is handled by a tiny number of contributors. This creates bottlenecks and increases the risk of fatigue for those who remain consistently involved.

Over time, participation patterns within the Test Team have changed. Many past members are no longer actively involved, which reflects the absence of clear long-term participation expectations in earlier years. As a result, previous team members were recognized under practices that did not clearly distinguish between short-term involvement and sustained contribution. These recognitions will be respected, as they were granted under the rules and understanding in place at that time.

Starting in 2026, the Test Team will introduce clearer participation guidelines. Earning “emeritus” status will be based on sustained and consistent contribution over time, rather than short-term or representative involvement alone. New members are expected to remain actively engaged, to the best of their ability, over an extended period.

Towards an easier-to-join but easier-to-leave team

Historically, joining any WordPress team is moderately easy and difficult at the same time.

Mainly there are two ways to join:

  1. The easy way: joining as a team representative. There is a window every year if you want to join this way, just for the sake of accomplishment, and you’re good to move on after that year. Many members have nominated themselves to try to witness if, by any chance, they got selected. The sole difficulty of this was the fact that only two members could join (three members in some teams), and in numerous instances, gaining reputation was not even relevant: by manipulating the vote system, some managed to join hideously.

  2. The hard way: an extremely rare way, where some members do an epic task and they are recognized as team members for a real merit. Exceptional tasks are things like triaging a couple hundred tickets or managing dozens of meetings, scrubs, or any other activity in the given team. This path is much less common and requires significant dedication and effort, making it the true recognition of commitment and contribution. For the past decade, less than a handful of members have been able to achieve the Test Team role through this method for many reasons, including poor guidelines to clearly help direct efforts.

To address these challenges, we must redefine the criteria for becoming and remaining a Team member, emphasizing sustained contribution and active participation over time rather than just initial entry.

The proposal comes with lowering the barrier for joining “the hard way” but dismissing those “reps” as the sole way to access. We should not forget that representatives are not team leaders; it’s just a shared commitment to support the team over a year-long period. Ideally, already established contributors should be taking this role instead of new members aspiring to get the role just to get the accomplishment or, even worse, the badge.

Lowering the entry barrier will facilitate the access of many more members to the team, but at the same time, new rules should come by to help remove the non-emeritus team members that have not fulfilled a consistent expectation over time. This way we will switch the sense of accomplishment with a sense of duty. Only those that stay for long enough will receive the “emeritus status,” as already introduced, which means preserving the status forever. More details will be commented on in next year’s meetings and further discussed in the Test Handbook GitHub issue tracker.

Announcing: The Test Team Training Program

To support these new guidelines and help members develop the skills needed for meaningful contributions, we are excited to announce the launch of the Test Team Training program. This initiative aims to provide structured learning opportunities and resources to empower both new and existing members to engage more effectively with testing activities.

Starting in January 2026, we will be covering 4 main areas during the 4-week program duration

  1. Development of handbook and training resources.
  2. Collaboration and communication within the team.
  3. Testing fundamentals and best practices.
  4. Meetings and scrub management.

Members willing to join the program should be available to invest at least 20 hours during the program’s month (expecting 2-hour live sessions + 3 hours of individual practice per week). “Graduating” will not necessarily warrant a spot on the Test Team but will provide precise guidance on the steps to get there with ease.

Be aware that this is not a mentorship but a guided trainer’s training. Instead, it focuses on equipping participants with precise knowledge and tools to effectively contribute to and support the team’s testing efforts. We may consider future trainings depending on the results. It will be open only to 5 spots. Even though, theoretically, Team members don’t need to be technical for this training, a basic level of technical familiarity (i.e., GitHubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/, WordPress testing workflows, and reading code) is required. In case that there are more spot requests than the 5-cap limit, we will be selecting by technical skill level.

If you have come this far and you want to join, please fill out the following form:

The starting date will probably be the 8th or 15th of January, but it is still pending confirmation. Each of the two one-hour live sessions will most likely be around 3 or 4 PM GMT Tuesdays and Thursdays, and they won’t be recorded.

Props to @nikunj8866, @mosescursor and @sajib1223 for helping review this article and offering feedback.

#core-test, #test-contributors, #training

Week in Test: December 15, 2025

Hello and welcome to another edition of Week in Test, the place where contributors of any skill level can find opportunities to contribute to WordPress through testing. You can find the Test Team in #core-test.

Table of Contents

Calls for Testing 📣

Calls for Testing can originate from any team, from themes to mobile apps to feature plugins. The following posts highlight features and releases that need special attention:

Test Handbook 📘

Merging of Test Handbook in GithubGitHub GitHub is a website that offers online implementation of git repositories that can easily be shared, copied and modified by other developers. Public repositories are free to host, private repositories require a paid subscription. GitHub introduced the concept of the ‘pull request’ where code changes done in branches by contributors can be reviewed and discussed before being merged be the repository owner. https://github.com/

For the last few weeks, a good number of test contributors embarked on the journey of reviewing our new Test Handbook based on GitHub. The Process has been concluded successfully with the merging.

  • We want to inform that the Test Handbook is officially synced. There might be a couple of bugs and things that are not looking good pending to be fixed.
  • Feel free to give it a check here, and if you find any bugs, go to the GitHub repository and report them.
    • You can send a PR with the fix, or simply send the issue, and we will check it

Weekly Testing Roundup 🤠

Bi-Weekly update: Test Team Update

Here’s a roundup of active tickets that are ready for testing contributions. Did you know that contributions to the Test Team are also a fantastic way to level up your WordPress knowledge and skills? Dive in to contribute, and gain coveted props 😎 for a coming release.

1. WordPress CoreCore Core is the set of software required to run WordPress. The Core Development Team builds WordPress. Testing

a. Patch Testing 🩹

Who? All contributors (not just developers) who can set up a local testing environment. Why?
It is necessary to apply proposed patches and test per the testing instructions in order to validate that a patch fixes the issue.

The following tickets (4) have been reviewed and a patch provided, and need testers to apply the patch and manually test, then provide feedback through a patch test report:

b. Bug Reproduction

It is necessary to confirm if the bug is happening under multiple conditions and environments, using the bug reproduction report in order to validate the issue.

The following tickets (205) have been reviewed and milestoned, and need testers to check the instructions and manually test if the issue is reproducible, the provide a bug reproduction report:

c. Handbook Review

Here are the current activities being discussed in the Test Handbook:

  1. We need to review https://github.com/WordPress/test-handbook/pull/98
  • Test Team Discussions
    • Time to Review/Update the Get Set Up for Testing Page.
    • Time to Comment Back/Update the Test Team Reps Page.
    • Update on Test Handbook: New pages for Feature & Enhancement Testing (#90), E2E Testing (#91), and Patch Testing Scrubs (#92) are available; contributors can update content via GitHub issues.

2. GutenbergGutenberg The Gutenberg project is the new Editor Interface for WordPress. The editor improves the process and experience of creating new content, making writing rich content much simpler. It uses ‘blocks’ to add richness rather than shortcodes, custom HTML etc. https://wordpress.org/gutenberg/ Testing

👋 Want to contribute to WordPress/Gutenberg? If you have a bug or an idea, read the contributing guidelines before opening an issue. If you’re ready to tackle some open issues, we’ve collected some good first issues for you.

a. Gutenberg Bug Reproduction Testing

The following tickets (1) have been filed reporting a known bug and needs testers to manually test, then provide feedback through a bug reproduction report that the issue can be reproduced.

b. Gutenberg Patch Testing

All contributors (not just developers) who can set up a local testing environment.
Why? It is necessary to apply proposed patches and test per the testing instructions in order to validate that a patch fixes the issue.

The following tickets have been reviewed, and a patch provided, and need testers to apply the patch and manually test, then provide feedback through a patch test report:

Profile Badge Awards 🎉

Congratulations to the recipients of the Test Contributor Badge 🎉

– Kindly find the Contribution Guidelines here

Read/Watch/Listen 🔗

Upcoming Meetings 🗓

🚨 There will be regular #core-test meetings held in 2025.

2025 Schedule:

Interested in hosting a <test-scrub>? Test Team needs you! Check out Leading Bug Scrubs for details, or inquire in #core-test for more info.

Props to @nikunj8866 for helping review this article and offering feedback

#core-test, #full-site-editing, #gutenberg, #make-wordpress-orgupdates, #web

X-post: Test Team Update: 8 December, 2025

X-post from +make.wordpress.org/updates: Test Team Update: 8 December, 2025

Team Chat Agenda: 3rd December, 2025

Here is the agenda for the upcoming Test Team Chat scheduled for Wednesday, 3rd December 2025 at 16:00 GMT+2, which is held in the #core-test Slack channel. Lurkers welcome!

Agenda

Leave a Comment

  • Do you have something to propose for the agenda?
  • Can’t make the meeting, but have a question for the Test Team?

If any of the above apply, please leave a comment below.