Archive: 2025/12 - Page 5

Leona Whitcombe

Education Partnerships: Using Wikipedia in Classrooms Without Cheating

Wikipedia isn't a cheating tool-it's a classroom superpower when used right. Learn how teachers are turning Wikipedia edits into real research skills, helping students think critically and avoid misinformation.

Leona Whitcombe

How Wikipedia Corrects Factual Errors in News Coverage

Wikipedia doesn't wait for news outlets to correct their mistakes-volunteers do. Learn how it identifies, debates, and fixes false claims from the media with transparency and source-based editing.

Leona Whitcombe

How Wikipedia Affects Student Learning Outcomes: What the Research Shows

Research shows Wikipedia can improve student learning when used correctly. It's not a shortcut-it's a tool for finding credible sources and building research skills. Teachers who teach students how to use it see better outcomes.

Leona Whitcombe

Longitudinal Studies of Wikipedia Editor Retention and Churn

Longitudinal studies reveal why most Wikipedia editors quit within weeks-and what keeps the few who stay. It’s not about rules. It’s about feeling seen.

Leona Whitcombe

Wikimania 2025 Conference Coverage and Highlights

Wikimania 2025 brought together over 2,000 volunteers from 92 countries to shape the future of free knowledge. Highlights include new tools for editor safety, a $12M fund for underrepresented languages, and a firm stance against AI-generated content without human oversight.

Leona Whitcombe

Arbitration Committee on Wikipedia: How Contentious Disputes Are Settled

The Wikipedia Arbitration Committee handles the most heated editor disputes, enforcing community rules to keep content neutral and editing civil. Learn how it works, what cases it handles, and why it's vital to Wikipedia’s survival.

Leona Whitcombe

How Wikipedia Is Fighting AI Misinformation With New Policies

Wikipedia is fighting AI misinformation with strict sourcing rules, AI-detection bots, and a new transparency policy requiring editors to disclose AI use. It's not banning AI-it's making sure truth still wins.

Leona Whitcombe

Science Journalism Techniques for Explaining Wikipedia's Technical Infrastructure

Wikipedia's infrastructure runs on complex servers, bots, and databases-yet most journalism skips the tech. Learn how to explain its real backbone without oversimplifying or misleading readers.

Leona Whitcombe

What Triggers Massive Wikipedia Traffic During COVID-19-Style Surges

Wikipedia sees massive traffic spikes during health crises and emergencies because people turn to it for clear, reliable answers when fear and uncertainty rise. It outperforms official sites with faster updates, plain language, and global access.

Leona Whitcombe

Reliable Sources Noticeboard: How Community Decisions Shape Source Quality

The Reliable Sources Noticeboard is Wikipedia's community-driven system for evaluating source quality. Learn how volunteers decide what sources are trustworthy-and why it matters for everyone who uses online information.

Leona Whitcombe

How to Use Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses on Wikipedia

Systematic reviews and meta-analyses are the most reliable sources for Wikipedia edits. Learn how to find, cite, and use them to improve accuracy on medical, scientific, and environmental topics.

Leona Whitcombe

Podcast Journalism About Wikipedia: How Stories Are Built from Edit Wars, Bias, and Hidden Histories

Podcast journalism is uncovering the hidden battles behind Wikipedia’s edits - from bias and anonymity to cultural erasure. Learn how stories are shaped by edit wars, ethics, and who gets to define truth.