• 2007 AAR League

    You can’t just throw out a source because it might not be accurate.  The vast majority of stuff on wikipedia is accurate I’d wager.  Wikipedia is a valid jumping off point and if you have reason to doubt the accuracy of the information provided for a particular topic then feel free to state your reasons and/or post a source that contradicts the info in question.

    An argument with wikipedia as a source is still better than an argument with no source.

    As for the topic at hand (Are books better than wikipedia), it depends what kind of books  :wink:

  • '18 '17 '16 '11 Moderator

    I’m not throwing it out.  I’m saying its a valid secondary source to confirm information you got from books or valid primary sources.  However, many professors in Universities and Colleges HAVE thrown it out entirely for a myriad of reasons the top two being: Lack of concrete credibility and Lack of research needed by the student to perform the assignment.

  • 2007 AAR League

    I’d suggest that lack of effort on the student to properly research would probably be the main reason.

    I’d also suggest that if we were in a classroom setting here, there are a lot of things that people would probably have to do differently  8-)  Good thing we’re not in a classroom setting  :wink:

  • 2007 AAR League

    @Jennifer:

    I’m not throwing it out.  I’m saying its a valid secondary source to confirm information you got from books or valid primary sources.

    But a secondary source has rarely been required on this site.  So you are saying that it’s ok to only have one source (as long as it’s not wikipedia)?  And it’s ok to use wikipedia as long as there is another source?  So basically you are ignoring wikipedia totally and just using the other source for info.  Thus you are “throwing it out”.

  • '18 '17 '16 '11 Moderator

    For purposes of discussion here, yea.  I’d say a source that contradicts Wikipedia would be weight more heavily in my eyes then a wikipedia only source.  There’s more too it, you have to find out what bias the other source may or may not have, but generally speaking if Wikipedia says the Ocean is Green and Scientific American says the Ocean is Blue I’m going to go with Scientific American. (*yes, I know it’s ridiculous, I’m using it for demonstration only.  We know Wikipedia’s not going to say green, it’s going to say blue or clear depending on the depth you look into, unless it’s refrencing the pollution which may be green, brown or orange.)

  • 2007 AAR League

    @Jennifer:

    For purposes of discussion here, yea.  I’d say a source that contradicts Wikipedia would be weight more heavily in my eyes then a wikipedia only source.  There’s more too it, you have to find out what bias the other source may or may not have, but generally speaking if Wikipedia says the Ocean is Green and Scientific American says the Ocean is Blue I’m going to go with Scientific American. (*yes, I know it’s ridiculous, I’m using it for demonstration only.  We know Wikipedia’s not going to say green, it’s going to say blue or clear depending on the depth you look into, unless it’s refrencing the pollution which may be green, brown or orange.)

    It does depend on the contradictory source, but for the most part I’d agree with this.  But it doesn’t mean that someone automatically needs to provide a second source whenever they are using wikipedia.  Only when a more reputable contradictory source is provided.

    But that makes wikipedia no different from any other source.  It’s still a valid primary source until a contradictory source is provided.  Note that is not the same as:

    @Jennifer:

    I’m not throwing it out. I’m saying its a valid secondary source to confirm information you got from books or valid primary sources.

  • 2007 AAR League

    I’m concerned that there seems to be a negative view on the veracity of information in wikipedia.

    I won’t deny that there have been well publicized cases of falsified or blatantly wrong information but this is true in any media.  If anything I would be more suspicious of a single book source that does not sound right than a wikipedia source.

    Certainly checking the veracity of a wikipedia article is much easier than doing the same for a book.  Every wikipedia page has a discussion and edit trail that will allow anyone to examine when particular changes were made and raise concerns (or read the discussion) about those changes.  This is a much faster and transparent revision trail than anything being done in print.

    It is worth remembering wikipedia is modeled on an encylopedia.  This means that, like paper encyclopedias, it is not a primary source.  It provides an article on a topic that is, at best, a summary of the information.  While summaries are nice, the devil is in the details and we would be fools to not be attentive to that.  Wikipedia does provide extensive lists of primary sources and that is the best reason for linking to that wikipedia article.


  • @Baghdaddy:

    I’m concerned that there seems to be a negative view on the veracity of information in wikipedia.

    I won’t deny that there have been well publicized cases of falsified or blatantly wrong information but this is true in any media.  If anything I would be more suspicious of a single book source that does not sound right than a wikipedia source.

    Certainly checking the veracity of a wikipedia article is much easier than doing the same for a book.  Every wikipedia page has a discussion and edit trail that will allow anyone to examine when particular changes were made and raise concerns (or read the discussion) about those changes.  This is a much faster and transparent revision trail than anything being done in print.

    It is worth remembering wikipedia is modeled on an encylopedia.  This means that, like paper encyclopedias, it is not a primary source.  It provides an article on a topic that is, at best, a summary of the information.  While summaries are nice, the devil is in the details and we would be fools to not be attentive to that.  Wikipedia does provide extensive lists of primary sources and that is the best reason for linking to that wikipedia article.

    This is pretty much what I was going to say.

    Wikipedia must still cite sources.  It also has posting guidelines that promote objectivity (hot to avoid weasel words, for instance).  It does everything that a reputable source must do.

    Just because it can be edited by anybody (note: that’s not the reality of what happens, though) doesn’t mean that it’s an invalid source of information.  Pages are constantly reviewed, peer reviewed, and updated by consensus.  These are things that books and encyclopedias must do as well.

    One strength of Wiki is that it can be updated instantly as information changes.  It can also be more easily vandalized, as a weakness.

    I can understand that professors want their students to research information on their own and do the work - so they shouldn’t accept Wikipedia on the same grounds as an encyclopedia.

    However, to say books are more valid than Wiki is asinine.  Books can be just as wrong, if not more so, and out of date or biased than Wiki can be.  I smell a technophobe when statements are thrown around like that.

    BTW, doing a WHOIS lookup of www.chicagocrimerate.org shows that not only is the server down, but that it is nonexistant and the domain is open for purchase.


  • Wiki’s a good jumping-off point. I think someone else made that point.

    Edit: LOL, I might as well have quoted NCS.


  • Hey, matters not to me.

    The point is that other folks (me, you, Jen to name a few) have all reached the same conclussion regarding Wiki…
    A great place to start, a bad place to stop.

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