[WikiEN-l] Juvenalia
dpbsmith at verizon.net
dpbsmith at verizon.net
Fri May 20 00:08:56 UTC 2005
I'm thinking out loud, and I am not making any specific proposal or
coming to any particular conclusion.
I haven't been following the recent school brouhaha, but it seems to me
there's an aspect to the school issue that people have been tapdancing
around.
In addition to the general encyclopedias, there are a host of
single-volume encyclopedias on limited topics. The Encyclopedia of
Chicago. The Encyclopedia of Buddhism. Encyclopedia of Western Railroad
History. The American Horticultural Society A to Z Encyclopedia of
Garden Plants. The New International Encyclopedia of Bible
Difficulties. Donna Kooler's Encyclopedia of Crochet. The New
Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding. The Star Wars Encyclopedia. The
Comic Book Encyclopedia.
My guess is that I would personally accept 99% of this material as
being "encyclopedic," even if much of it is on material I personally
have little interest in. Why? Because to me, encyclopedic does not mean
"of personal interest to me." It means "having _some_ reasonable level
of thoroughness, accuracy, and scholarship." An article _needs_ to have
these things if it is to serve the reader.
But Wikipedia is an all-volunteer contribution. That means that it also
needs to serve contributors. But there has to be some kind of balance.
A vanity page is an obvious example of a page that is out of balance.
It serves _primarily_ the ego of the contributor.
Now, what happens when someone wants to contribute to Wikipedia, but
doesn't really have the skill set to do so?
I suspect that a lot of the arguments about certain classes of article
are really related to age-specific interest, and to age-related levels
of skill and maturity. I sometimes fancy I hear in these debates the
voices older siblings putting younger ones in their place. Articles
about Pokemon are baby stuff--wait until you grow up and can write
articles about _serious_ things like Harry Potter. Harry Potter
articles are cruft--they're not _important,_ like Hilary Duff, or
Britney Spears, or Justin Timberlake.
I sometimes fancy that when people say "let _articles_ undergo organic
growth," which is nonsense because article do not grow, people write
them, what they are really saying is "don't discourage young
_contributors_" (who certainly will undergo organic growth).
The problem with high schools has little to do with notability. It is
that the people most likely to be interested in writing articles about
them are people of high-school age, who _for the most part_ tend not to
have the skills to write very good encyclopedia articles. These
articles tend to be out of balance: they mostly serve the needs of the
contributors, rather than the needs of readers.
Now if, in fact, we actually have a crowd of serious worker bees who
really will swarm around all the little irritating particles of school
substubs and deposit the nacre of scholarship on them until they become
sparkling crystals :-) then there's probably no harm in them...
--
Daniel P. B. Smith, dpbsmith at verizon.net
"Elinor Goulding Smith's Great Big Messy Book" is now back in print!
Sample chapter at http://world.std.com/~dpbsmith/messy.html
Buy it at http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1403314063/
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