Category: Online Encyclopedias - Page 19
How WikiProjects Collaborate on Cross-Topic Issues
WikiProjects on Wikipedia collaborate across topics to build accurate, well-rounded articles. Learn how volunteers coordinate on complex subjects like climate change, history, and science-and how you can help.
Deletion Policy Nuances: Speedy, PROD, and AfD on Wikipedia
Wikipedia uses three deletion methods-Speedy, PROD, and AfD-to remove low-quality content while protecting notable topics. Each has different rules, speeds, and purposes. Learn how they work and how to use them.
How to Train Faculty to Use Wikipedia in Coursework
Train faculty to use Wikipedia in coursework by turning it into a critical thinking tool. Learn how to teach students to evaluate sources, trace citations, and contribute to real knowledge-not just avoid it.
Rate Limits and Courtesy Policies for Wikipedia API Clients
Learn how to use the Wikipedia API responsibly with proper rate limits and courtesy policies to avoid being blocked. Essential guidelines for bot developers and data researchers.
How to Evaluate Wikipedia Article Quality Before Citing in Academia
Learn how to evaluate Wikipedia articles for academic use by checking citations, edit history, and quality ratings. Discover why professors discourage direct citations-and how to use Wikipedia as a gateway to credible sources.
Reproducibility in Wikipedia Research: How to Share Code and Data Effectively
Wikipedia research often fails reproducibility because code and data aren't shared. Learn how to properly document, archive, and share your analysis to make your work verifiable and trustworthy.
Governance Experiments: How Citizen Juries Are Shaping Wikipedia’s Future
Wikipedia is testing citizen juries and randomized panels to make its knowledge more fair and representative. These experiments bring everyday people into decision-making, improving accuracy and trust in the world's largest encyclopedia.
Comparing Wikidata Integration in Wikipedia and AI Encyclopedias
Wikipedia uses Wikidata for structured, community-verified facts. AI encyclopedias rely on proprietary knowledge graphs. Learn how they differ in accuracy, updates, and trustworthiness.
Civility Sanctions on Wikipedia: Where Lines Are Drawn
Wikipedia enforces civility to keep collaboration alive. Sanctions aren't about being polite-they're about preventing toxic behavior that drives away editors and undermines the encyclopedia's accuracy.
Lua Modules on Wikipedia: How They Power Templates and Data
Lua modules power Wikipedia's templates and data displays, replacing messy wiki markup with clean, reusable code. They handle citations, infoboxes, and dynamic content behind the scenes-faster, safer, and more reliably than ever before.
Future Product Ideas: AI-Powered Research Tools for Wikipedians
AI-powered research tools are transforming how Wikipedia editors find, verify, and cite sources-making fact-checking faster, more accurate, and accessible to everyone. These tools don't replace editors-they empower them.
When to Use Primary Sources on Wikipedia and How to Attribute Them Properly
Learn when and how to use primary sources on Wikipedia correctly. Understand the rules for attribution, reliability, and avoiding original research violations with clear examples and practical guidance.