FreakyLocz14
Conservative Patriot
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- Seen Aug 29, 2018
We all know what Wikipedia is. Many of us who have pursued higher education also know that teachers seem to hate Wikipedia.
The most common reason they give for doing so is that Wikipedia can be edited by anyone, so it is unreliable. While that may be true sometimes, the large majority of the time, a Wikipedia article is a good article. The WikiPolice are usually very good at catching and reverting vandalism. Also, articles that are frequent targets of vandalism can be set so that only registered users with a good history can edit them. Lots of online sources that are not open to anonymous editors can be unreliable. Even printed sources can be unreliable, though at a lesser rate than online sources
Some high school and college teachers I've talked to have admitted that they don't like Wikipedia because it makes thing easier for their students. My question is, why is that a bad thing? As long as the student learned what needed to be learned from the assignment, why should it matter how long it took or how much digging the student had to do to complete it? That argument hold less merit than the first one, imo. I can see where this can be a problem if the assignment requires very specific, technical research; but for general information, Wikipedia is often reliable.
I'm not talking about plagiarism, btw. I know that lazy students will plagiarize Wikipedia. Intentional, uncited plagiarism is unacceptable, but it can come from other sources than Wikipedia. I'm talking about when a student references Wikipedia for information and does cite it, not when a student plagiarizes from Wikipedia.
What are your thoughts on this?
Discuss.
The most common reason they give for doing so is that Wikipedia can be edited by anyone, so it is unreliable. While that may be true sometimes, the large majority of the time, a Wikipedia article is a good article. The WikiPolice are usually very good at catching and reverting vandalism. Also, articles that are frequent targets of vandalism can be set so that only registered users with a good history can edit them. Lots of online sources that are not open to anonymous editors can be unreliable. Even printed sources can be unreliable, though at a lesser rate than online sources
Some high school and college teachers I've talked to have admitted that they don't like Wikipedia because it makes thing easier for their students. My question is, why is that a bad thing? As long as the student learned what needed to be learned from the assignment, why should it matter how long it took or how much digging the student had to do to complete it? That argument hold less merit than the first one, imo. I can see where this can be a problem if the assignment requires very specific, technical research; but for general information, Wikipedia is often reliable.
I'm not talking about plagiarism, btw. I know that lazy students will plagiarize Wikipedia. Intentional, uncited plagiarism is unacceptable, but it can come from other sources than Wikipedia. I'm talking about when a student references Wikipedia for information and does cite it, not when a student plagiarizes from Wikipedia.
What are your thoughts on this?
Discuss.