UBC professor grades students on Wikipedia status

by mtippett | May 12, 2008 at 04:32 pm
1099 views | 5 Recommendations | 5 comments

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A UBC professor is embracing Wikipedia as a platform for academic publication.  More universities should be taking this approach. 
"VANCOUVER, Canada (AFP) - Wikipedia, the upstart Internet encyclopedia that most universities forbid students to use, has suddenly become a teaching tool for professors. 

Recently, university teachers have swapped student term papers for assignments to write entries for the free online encyclopedia.

Wikipedia is an "open-source" web site, which means that entries can be started or edited by anyone in the world with an Internet connection.

Writing for Wikipedia "seems like a much larger stage, more of a challenge," than a term paper, said professor Jon Beasley-Murray, who teaches Latin American literature at the University of British Columbia in this western Canadian city.

"The vast majority of Wikipedia entries aren't very good," said Beasley-Murray, but said the site aims to be academically sound.

To reach its goal of academic standards, said Wikipedia's web site, it set up an assessment scale on its English-language site. The best encyclopedia entries are ranked as "Featured Articles," and run each day on the home page at www.wikipedia.com.

To be ranked as a "Featured Article," Wikipedia said an entry must "provide thorough, well-written coverage of their topic, supported by many references to peer-reviewed publications."

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Jarrett Martineau

Very interesting, in light of this: http://www.nowpublic.com/culture/heres-my-essay-sorry-its-late-lol

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Drew Bulman

There was a study done not too long ago which compared several dozen articles on wikipedia with those found in encyclopedia Britannica.  If I remember right, there was only a slight number of errors more in Wikipedia than Britannica. 

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mtippett

Yes that's right.  Nature Magazine did a study.

Rhonda J Mangus
Rhonda J Mangus
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 22:53 on May 12th, 2008

mtippett, I can't count how many times I was told not to use "wiki" as a source reference. Glad to know the UBC Prof is "embracing" it.  It certainly will be an excellent platform to showcase academic work and, perhaps, lend credibility to a great open source web site!

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aidamus

Serene UBC village scene after great snowfall

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Rhonda J Mangus
First Flagged at 10:53 PM, May 12, 2008 by Rhonda J Mangus
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