Wikipedia News Desk - Page 21
Using Wikipedia in the Classroom: Teacher's Best Practices Guide
Discover how to turn Wikipedia from a banned resource into a powerful classroom tool. Learn practical strategies for teaching source evaluation, critical thinking, and collaborative knowledge-building with real student examples.
Unexpected Wikipedia Topics Gaining Popularity: Emerging Trends
Wikipedia is seeing unexpected spikes in traffic for obscure historical events, scientific mysteries, and forgotten pop culture topics. These aren't viral trends-they're quiet waves of curiosity from people seeking real answers.
The Signpost's Traffic and Readership Statistics on Wikipedia
The Signpost is Wikipedia's volunteer-run weekly newspaper, tracking community debates, policy changes, and editorial conflicts. With 45,000 weekly readers, it’s a vital internal tool for editors and researchers alike.
Wikidata Explained: How Wikipedia’s Structured Data Project Powers the Web
Wikidata is the structured data backbone behind Wikipedia, powering accurate, multilingual facts across the web. Learn how it works, why it matters, and how anyone can contribute.
The Future of Encyclopedic Knowledge: Human Editors, AI Systems, and Trust Online
As AI generates encyclopedic content faster than ever, human editors remain essential for accuracy, context, and trust. Discover how hybrid systems are reshaping online knowledge-and what you can do to spot reliable information.
How to Spot POV Pushing and Original Research on Wikipedia
Learn how to spot biased edits and made-up claims on Wikipedia. Understand POV pushing and original research-two major threats to Wikipedia's neutrality-and what you can do to help keep it reliable.
How Wikipedia Contributors Gain and Use Academic Expertise
Wikipedia's accuracy depends on a mix of academic experts and passionate non-academics. Learn how credentials shape editing, where bias creeps in, and why anyone with reliable sources can help build trusted knowledge.
Visualizing Topics With Wikipedia Data: Tools for Data Journalists
Discover how data journalists use Wikipedia's real-time edit history and page views to uncover trends, track misinformation, and build stories. Free tools like WikiWho and Pageviews Analysis turn public edits into powerful reporting insights.
Systemic Bias on Wikipedia: How Editor Demographics Shape What We See Online
Wikipedia's editor demographics skew heavily toward white, male, Western professionals, leading to systemic gaps in coverage of women, non-Western cultures, and marginalized communities. This bias shapes what the world sees as true.
Writing Guidelines for The Signpost: Style and Sourcing
Learn how to write for The Signpost, Wikipedia's community newspaper, with clear guidelines on style, sourcing, structure, and avoiding common mistakes. Essential reading for anyone documenting Wikipedia's inner workings.
Policy Case Studies: BLP Reforms and Aftermath on Wikipedia
Wikipedia's BLP policy reforms since 2006 have made biographies safer but less inclusive. Learn how changes in sourcing, protection, and equity efforts shaped modern editing practices and who gets left behind.
How Press Freedom Shapes the Reliability of News Sources on Wikipedia
Press freedom ensures accurate, independent journalism-which is the foundation of reliable information on Wikipedia. Without it, Wikipedia's content becomes incomplete, biased, or outdated.