As a writer, the first thing I do when I encounter a question is Google it.
Ninety percent of the time, this leads me straight to Wikipedia.
As an instructor of college composition, one of the first things I teach my first-year composition students is to stay away from Wikipedia, especially when it comes to their academic research.
The writer in me is thankful for the straightforward information I receive the moment I open a Wikipedia article. The instructor in me cringes. Every. Single. Time.
Wikipedia isn’t an academic publishing website. As such, there is no review process for the information being published. Experts in this area of study have not reviewed or approved this information.
Many articles and texts have been written about the dangers of trusting the information found on Wikipedia, including articles published by The Guardian and the New Literacy Project. In fact, Wikipedia itself warns users not to use it as an academic source, because anyone has the ability to edit articles at any point in time.
So, as writers, we shouldn’t go to Wikipedia for our research, right?
The answer is this: Wikipedia can be the start of your research. Your research just can’t end there.
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