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Wikipedia sucks students in with reliable information

By Kyle Buis

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Published: Sunday, February 25, 2007

Updated: Monday, May 11, 2009

The elephant population across the world tripled in the first half of 2006.

Well, not exactly.

But Stephen Colbert used this false fact to support his theory of Wikiality, or the belief that if enough people thought something was true, the facts couldn't get in the way. To prove his theory, he sent his viewers to edit many entries on Wikipedia with special "facts" he provided.

Now, history students at Middlebury College in Vermont are being told not to cite Wikipedia in research papers.

Thusly, we have a new entry into the "They Actually Had to Say It" hall of fame.

Wikipedia is a valuable resource. It has information you couldn't find anywhere else, and most of it is correct.

But slips in accuracy should make an average college student stop and think that maybe he shouldn't include in his paper that bears are "godless killing machines" - another Colbert fact.

Even Wikipedia's founder, Jimmy Wales, has said not to use it as a source.

"For God's sake, you're in college. Don't cite the encyclopedia," Wales said at a conference last year.

The site acts as an open-source encyclopedia. In technology, open-source refers to software whose source code has been released to developers to improve on.

For the less tech-savvy, think of someone building half of a jigsaw puzzle, getting stuck and then letting someone else work on it.

Wikipedia is a massive puzzle that was started in 2001 with a few pieces of knowledge and has since been added to by many users. The problem is that not everybody knows how to put the pieces in the proper way.

Chico State doesn't have a policy condemning the use of Wikipedia as an academic source, nor should it. That decision is left to individual departments and professors who typically aren't thrilled to see the site cited.

"Most professors I have worked with are not crazy about Wikipedia citations in bibliographies," said Sarah Blakeslee, head of information and instruction at Meriam Library.

To wake freshmen up to this reality, Blakeslee uses Colbert's elephant facts as example of the site's biggest weakness.

"Anyone can edit anything on Wikipedia," she said.

There are no publishers, professional editors or even experts to proofread the articles before changes are posted on the site, Blakeslee said.

But even with these potential downsides, the library's Web site still lists Wikipedia under the encyclopedia section.

"I think it's an incredible resource," Blakeslee said.

The elastic nature of the site allows for even more topics and faster updates than books, academic journals or magazines. Pop culture and current events are covered much more thoroughly on Wikipedia than in most publications.

"Sometimes I'll go on and read about somebody dying, and it'll be updated on Wikipedia," Blakeslee said. "There's no other encyclopedia that could keep up to the minute like Wikipedia can."

Because of its thoroughness and ability to be updated in real time, Wikipedia can act as a rudder to point students in the right direction to the information they're trying to find, she said.

Outside of that, Blakeslee had one piece of advice for students about Wikipedia.

"If it's not important, it's a good source."

Kyle Buis can be reached at opinioneditor@theorion.com

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8 comments

Maryna
Sat Jan 16 2010 04:35
Wikipedia is a great _resource_ and, like most encyclopedias, useless _source_. Well, apart from social studies and the like - the discussion and history tabs can illustrate many a thesis.
Mr. P
Tue Dec 29 2009 15:20
Any college student even defending this site needs to have their education re-evaluated. Just because it ends in -pedia does not make it an encyclopedia. It is not. I instantly fail students who cite this page and report them to the dean if they are stupid enough to plagiarize off the page. Amazingly, despite my 1st week lecture on this 3rd grade website, I still had people copy and paste it into their paper.
I'll show you my healthcare reform
Tue Nov 3 2009 16:18
Wikipedia is a great site. Since you can't really get a book and check up on the current stocks, or the death of someone who just died yesterday, Wikipedia is the solution. Hell no, I don't site it. My college wont even let me if I could, but it is the BEST place to get a general idea, and you can track down the citations that the authors used to find the actual information. Think of Wikipedia as a giant Index, just look and click on what you need to know.
its a secret yaaaaaaaaa
Wed Sep 23 2009 01:31
this information is great for kids to read if you dont like to read thats okay you have information in your brave so plaese raed this youll have alot of infermation inside your haed trust me i dint like to read but thisb got me more information more than i need it yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa like Avetura they rule go baby
clara
Wed Sep 23 2009 01:25
i think this is great information for all students to read i read it i think is great
Das
Mon Sep 21 2009 13:55
I'd say that I do not allow students to use it, BUT if they want to use it as a starting point to find other materials to site, it's not really that bad for that. You'll find a lot of mistakes in their entries sometimes when you do your searching, or the more heinous links that suggest a little bit about what they're citing, but not as much as they seem to imply by the fact that they're listed. As a rule, it should never stand as a source, but it can be a good starting point for research.
Your name
Sun Jul 26 2009 00:38
Wiki is a great source to get you one the right track, and most of the information compares with other accredited literature.
Mary
Fri Jul 10 2009 14:19
Great article. Wikipedia has zero credibility, none, nada. Worthless as a serious resource.






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