Users Status

You are not logged in.

Search

 

Recent Updates

Two Years to Democracy:...
Johnson, Gail L.: Two Years to Democracy: The 2Y2D...
mhatlie - 2012.04.24, 14:02
Eugene O'Neill performances...
I post here links to all the complete performances...
mhatlie - 2012.03.30, 23:54
more links
A Moon for the Misbegotten - Act One http://www.youtube.com /watch?v=K3V1TneJ4dQ&featu re=related A...
Meli (guest) - 2012.03.30, 23:34
A very touching story...
Just got this in my e-mail and wanted to share it: Subject:...
mhatlie - 2012.03.14, 11:14
Rezension: The Tempest...
Rezension bei amazon.de: SHAKESPEARE - No comment....
mhatlie - 2012.02.27, 13:20

Saturday, 31. March 2007

Wikipedia: Undergraduate history students are shocked at it's emptiness

A few weeks ago, I mentioned a new Wikipedia-based history assignment I was trying out. Well, I did it in this term's Western Civilization I, to 1650 and the results are in. It was a success!

I asked students to choose a Wikipedia article dealing with some controverial subject within the scope of the class and describe not the article, but the discussion behind the article.

The assignment was a scathing indictment of Wikipedia. While some of it can no-doubt be attributed to students writing what they think I want to hear, and not all students understood what the assignment was about, the majority did a good job with it. The students were asked to look at the discussions behind the articles and discovered - a lot of hot air. Even I was surprised how shallow, source-less, devoid of scholarly discussion, and downright petty much of the discussion of historical issues was. Students found anonymous authors engaged in name-calling, bickering over details without citing sources, long discussions of form with little regard to the actual facts of the subject at hand and religious grandstanding - in short, a lot of hollow discourse. Not one student gave a positive evaluation of his or her subject article discussion. The best evaluation was neutral.

It confirmed my worse fears about the Wikipedia project. Accumulation of knowledge is built around identifiable people (who can be held responsible for their claims) and verifiable (and hence ultimately falsifiable) claims. Wikipedia allows too much discourse devoid of either to be considered reliable for anything beyond the most trite factoids and - as always - the often extremely useful lists of links under each article.
logo

blog '66

by Mark R. Hatlie

Friends and Allies


About this blog
Academia
Americana
Arab-American Dialogue
Baltic studies
Derendingen
Family and neighborhood
Five-String Banjo
German Life and Culture
GTD
HAW
History
History Research
Life and work online
Literature and Reading
MBCC and Europe
... more
Profil
Logout
Subscribe Weblog