As I said .

 

Of course if any tool is deployed to automatically assess article quality,
then we can expect people to "game" it

 

This is exactly what the students are doing. They've obviously suspect that
their Wikipedia assignments are being assessed by trivial checks like number
of references and are now trying "game" the system. I presume this is their
experience with assignment writing more generally. In which case it says
more about their teachers than it does about Wikipedia.

 

But generally Wikipedia articles are not written by students for academic
credit, so most Wikipedia articles should not exhibit this sort of
reference-gaming behaviour.

 

Kerry

 

 

  _____  

From: Stuart Yeates [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Monday, 16 December 2013 10:27 AM
To: [email protected]; Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Cc: Research into Wikimedia content and communities
Subject: Re: [Wiki-research-l] Existitng Research on Article
QualityHeuristics?

 

 

On 15/12/2013, at 23:36, "Kerry Raymond" <[email protected]> wrote:

I doubt there is any single metric that is a predictor of quality but I
think citations is probably a good proxy. Of course, there are probably
counter-examples but generally an article with lots of citations suggests a
sincere effort at a better-quality article. 

 

We are currently having the opposite experience in the education field. The
problem is tertiary level students who have learn that references are
important, but not that the nature of the thing referenced is important. So
when a lecturer sets a class assignment of writing a Wikipedia article they
include their list of 50 primary sources that they've been building up in
zotero, with little to no consideration of their appropriateness.

 

Then they wonder why the article gets PRODd. 

 

Cheers

Stuart

 

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