Not "individual practices"; this is an English Wikipedia Policy:
Do not use articles from Wikipedia (whether this English Wikipedia or Wikipedias in other languages) as sources. Also, do not use websites that mirror Wikipedia content or publications that rely on material from Wikipedia as sources. Content from a Wikipedia article is not considered reliable unless it is backed up by citing reliable sources. Confirm that these sources support the content, then use them directly.[11] (There is also a risk of circular reference/circular reporting when using a Wikipedia article or derivative work as a source.)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Verifiability#Wikipedia_and_sources_...
On Thu, Sep 26, 2019 at 12:24 PM Kathleen DeLaurenti kathleendelaurenti@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all -
Thanks for the responses. Regardless of our individual practices, I don't see any good coming from Wikipedia positively asserting that it should "never be cited," and that's the crux of my concern here.
Best,
Kathleen
On Thu, Sep 26, 2019 at 1:17 PM Paul S. Wilson paulscrawl@gmail.com wrote:
I have never considered user-generated content on Wikipedia to be more than what librarians call a "discovery service".
Briefly skimming an article on a subject l may know little about, I invariably evaluate the sources rather than the text and hit the cited references. In my 15-year experience, even the weakest and most apparently biased articles have at least a few refs that lead to citable sources and larger literature.
On Thu, Sep 26, 2019, 11:54 AM Merrilee Proffitt mproffitt@gmail.com wrote:
Hi,
I completely agree with Kathleen. I would assert that it is a lack of nuance around the nature of information sources and the research task at hand that has lead educators and others to wholesale "ban" the use of Wikipedia.
Whether or not a source can be utilized in a research context depends on the researcher, and what information they are supporting with the citation. For my middle school daughter doing some investigation on an element in the periodic table (as she has been doing this week), the Wikipedia English article (or any encyclopedia article) is appropriate for her. For a graduate student in chemistry this would not be appropriate, but the grad student might (appropriately) cite Wikipedia for some basic definitional stuff, just as they might cite a dictionary or something similar. You see Wikipedia utilized appropriately in citations all the time -- why would we discourage this?
Having conversations about the veracity of online information is tough. Wikipedia can be challenging because articles are at various levels of development. To my mind, this makes it something that those of us engaged in conversations around information literacy should steer towards, rather than away from, because a) Wikipedia is widely utilized in a variety of contexts and b) it is a great teaching tool for talking about when you can trust information online and when you should steer clear. But saying "no" to any information source without having a discussion about it seems lazy. It definitely does not reflect the type of discourse we should be having, especially now.
I look forward to more discussion on this topic.
Merrilee
On Thu, Sep 26, 2019 at 9:02 AM Federico Leva (Nemo) nemowiki@gmail.com wrote:
Twitter doesn't facilitate reasoned arguments. I suppose as usual the goal was to encourage greater use of the references and other meta-content of Wikipedia articles, which are excellent tools for critical thinking.
Federico
Kathleen DeLaurenti, 26/09/19 17:55:
Hi all -
As a librarian who uses and supports Wikipedia, I wanted to bring up some issues around the BuzzFeed article posted today about M-Journal that has led to some messaging from the WikipediaUK twitter account that I find concerning. I'm not sure if this is the appropriate place to bring this up, but I wasn't sure where else to reach out.
For those who missed, a citation cite is not manufacturing journal articles if a student submits a Wiki article so that it looks like an "official" citation in their school research papers. https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanhatesthis/wikipedia-fake-academic-j...
Clearly there are some nefarious potential uses here, but what's more concerning is that the WikiUK twitter account has come forward forcefully saying that Wikipedia shouldn't be cited in the literature. Period. https://twitter.com/wikimediauk/status/1177215917534711808
I work very hard to improve the cite through my courses and academic advocacy as do many librarians. It's concern to me to see Wikipedia undermining its own authority in such a public way in what appears to be a misguided attempt to deflect association with the MJournal site.
Would welcome any insight or ideas on how to navigate this discussion. The entire M-Journal use case exists, imho, because we are still battling for a critical (not blanket acceptance) view of Wiki as a resources, and I find this kind of public statement to be very damaging to the hard work so many are doing to create a quality information resource.
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