My heart is warmed by the pleasent replies. :)
Regrding anti-expert bias, does anyone think verifiable experts should be allowed to cite themselves when editing wiki articles relating to their skills? I'm not sure what I think, but it seems an important question. I can definitely see it being a major step towards a citable, peer-reviewed journal level of quality.
Jack (Sam Spade)
On 11/19/05, Kat Walsh mindspillage@gmail.com wrote:
On 11/19/05, Jack Lynch jack.i.lynch@gmail.com wrote:
The academics at my uni think the wikipedia is mildly offensive, in the sense that they enjoy being paid to write books/journals/whathaveyou, and don't enjoy seeing amateurs giving it away for free. Because of this, and our noticable failings, students are penalised if they attempt to cite the wikipedia as a source at my uni.
I just now returned from an 8 hour seminar wherein we were repeatedly informed that free, non-governmental information on the internet is dubious at best, and should be avoided for anything other than commercial or general knowledge queries. Instead, the online university database was praised (it includes a subscription to britannica, btw ;)
Jack (Sam Spade)
Well, I'd've gotten penalized for citing Wikipedia too, but I'd also have gotten penalized for citing Britannica. However, various features of Wikipedia made it much better as a quick study aid than the more academically respectable references, and no one was ever the wiser. And it is good as a study aid -- but most university students I know *need* to be cautioned that not everything they read on the internet that looks legit is true. (I love Wikipedia, and I am an optimist, but, well...)
-Kat [[User:Mindspillage]] wannabe academic
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