[Air-l] Wikipedia warning -- Wikipedia is not a reliable information source

Sue Cranmer sue at jcranmer.freeserve.co.uk
Mon Dec 5 09:01:18 PST 2005


Hi 

This is a 'media literacy' question isn't it, about how people develop their
critical skills to be able to evaluate what they find in all forms of media?
Most of the research I've seen so far shows that young people in particular
are overtrusting of what they find on the web. We need programmes that
develop these skills alongside those taught around tv, newspapers, for
instance. 

I'm currently working on a European project called Mediappro which aims to
develop these kinds of interventions for young people.

Sue

-----Original Message-----
From: air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org
[mailto:air-l-bounces at listserv.aoir.org] On Behalf Of Ken Friedman
Sent: 04 December 2005 19:02
To: air-l at aoir.org
Subject: [Air-l] Wikipedia warning -- Wikipedia is not a reliable
information source


Dear Colleagues,

This letter is a suggestion that you address the problem of bad 
information in student papers from an increasingly poor source: 
Wikipedia. Wikipedia is not getting better. It is getting worse. One 
reason for this is the apparent case that the status of Wikipedia as 
a much-used reference resource makes it the target of opportunity for 
hoax efforts that would never enter an edited reference text.

There are now enough serious incidents of false and defamatory 
information in Wikipedia biographies to warrant prohibiting this as a 
reference source in universities and university-level professional 
schools. The same is true of inaccurate or false assertions in many 
articles.

The problem with Wikipedia is not that the Wiki system MAY develop a 
solid and reliable reference work, but that in the current form, it 
DOES NOT. It is as easy to change an article for the worse as for the 
better.

Nearly any university student today has access to a decent library 
and good on-line reference texts. In addition, anyone willing to 
search a bit will also fine outstanding SIGNED references sources by 
major scholars in many fields, as well as useful albeit older 
versions of respected references source no longer covered by 
copyright.

The current scandal concerning a false and defamatory biography of 
Robert Kennedy aide and friend John Siegenthaler (see below) and 
similar recent cases lead me to conclude that Wikipedia has no way to 
prevent problems like this from happening. This is made worse by the 
fact that Wikipedia is an automatic flow-through resource for other 
on-line sources.

Wikipedia is unacceptable as a research tool.

I have informed my students that they may no longer use Wikipedia as 
a reference or source on papers in my courses. I urge you to consider 
a similar statement. While Wikipedia may be a useful first step in 
seeking information, I no longer accept it as a credible source. 
Therefore, I advise students to look further when a project requires 
a reliable source.

Use of Wikipedia by students and researchers is an important 
validation mechanism for Wikipedia.

If enough of us prohibit Wikipedia as a reference source in our 
courses, programs, and schools, the message will eventually get 
through.

When it does, Wikipedia will find an appropriate way to monitor 
contributions. If they do not, the reputation of Wikipedia will sink 
to that of another crank web site.

Yours,

Ken Friedman

The Siegenthaler case in the New York Times and USA Today via Yahoo:

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/04/weekinreview/04seelye.html

http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/20051130/cm_usatoday/afalsewikipediabiograp
hy

-- 

Ken Friedman
Professor of Leadership and Strategic Design
Institute for Communication, Culture, and Language
Norwegian School of Management

Design Research Center
Denmark's Design School

email: ken.friedman at bi.no _______________________________________________
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