Wikipedia:Forum for Encyclopedic Standards

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WP:FES

The Forum for Encyclopedic Standards is a place where Wikipedians committed to writing quality articles can meet to promote encyclopedic and scholarly standards, even if they are not participants on the Wikimedia Foundation, the IRC channel, the mailing list, and conflict resolution committees (and who in turn currently lack a voice in the formulation of policy).

Like the Business and Economics Forum, another voluntary association on Wikipedia, our mission is to build a vibrant community with a pool of expertise that will match any organization, corporate or university.

We envision developing or refining:

  1. A set of goals for articles.
  2. A system to indicate articles or article versions that have attained those goals.
  3. A quality-based method of resolving editorial disputes.

Contents

Major areas of focus

  1. Sourcing and citing
  2. Schemes for editorial approval
  3. Schemes for dispute resolution

Possible models

Proposed guidelines and strategies

Please keep this page relatively terse. Discussions might be extended either on talk or on additional pages; generating a lot of Wikipedia: or m: pages would be fine.

Referencing in Wikipedia articles

We could significantly improve the references and the citation apparatus of various articles. Better referencing would have several benefits. It would enhance:

  1. Accuracy, by encouraging contributors to research the facts rather than writing from memory or stating mere opinions.
  2. Verifiability, by providing readers with the sources of the facts contained in the article.
  3. Agreement, by reducing controversy and edit wars. People are much more tolerant of statements that they do not agree with if it is clear that the statement is attributed to a particular individual or group.
  4. Credibility, by, for example, reducing the number of phantom attributions such as "most people feel", or "some experts claim" which are frequently used to disguise rants and mere opinion.
  5. Connectivity, by providing sources of additional information for those readers that wish to research the topic in more detail.
  6. Neutrality, by citing all relevant authoritative sources.
  7. Objectivity, by, rather than asserting a fact, attributing the assertions of fact to authoritative sources.

In determining citation guidelines the following general principles are important:

  1. The guidelines must be flexible because of the broad range of topics that they must apply to. Citations of academic topics may benefit from more rigorous standards than popular culture topics.
  2. The guidelines should encourage better "quality" sources.
  3. The guidelines should encourage more references rather than fewer (within reason).
  4. The guidelines should encourage a broad range of types of references (ie., book, journal, Web, etc.).
  5. The guidelines should encourage citation of the references from the body of the article itself. That is, wherever possible, any major point in the article should have a citation to the references section so that readers can check the original source of the idea.

Implemention may need to be multi-faceted, sequential, and/or dynamic. Possible useful tools to coordinate such an effort include:

  1. Standards for what are acceptable sources and for a minimum number of sources an article should provide.
    • These might eventually be universal across Wikipedia, but there seems almost no chance of immediate consensus on that. We may be able rather rapidly to establish standards in some subject-matter areas.
    • Possibly distinct policies on book references, peer-reviewed journal references, magazine and newspaper references, documents from governments or well-known organizations, miscellaneous web references
      • "...the gold rule is the blind juried journal, second the juried journal, then journals not peer-reviewed. In texts it is much more squiffy, with state of the field articles (synthesis of current published research), textbook chapters, case studies/research reports, and everything else as very fuzzy categories. Popular press, commentary, and other third hand reports become very questionable except when no other cite is available. [And]...what about citations which are exclusively abstracts of unpublished papers? - Amgine [1]
      • "In many fields in the social sciences and humanities, non-peer reviewed books ultimately have greater influence and are more important sources of authoritative knowledge..." - Slrubenstein
        • "Two things to consider: 1) At least in literature, the non-peer reviewed journals are sometimes considered to have a forgivable bias towards certain authors or groups of authors. These journals reflect the popular sentiment of admirers but are not considered authoritative by the academic community. 2) Many wiki-vandals when confronted with their lack of authority on a subject simply make references up. This puts an academic in untenable position, because we will undergo the time and expense to verify sources which puts an economic burden on us if we want to contribute to Wikipedia. The wiki-vandal, however, can make up references and source doctored articles with no personal repercussions just to bolster his point. The problem of authority in Wikipedia is not one dimensional (sourcing authoritative information). The reputation of the poster is another dimension that should be evaluated, just like we rate sellers on eBay. --Modemx 20:14, 27 Jan 2005 (UTC)[2]
    • Possibility of articles about any frequently-used sources, either in main article space or in a distinct name space.
    • Strategic management proposed as a paradigm of a well-referenced article.
  2. A mechanism — comparable to Wikipedia:Cleanup and possibly placing Template:Unsourced or something like it on the talk pages — to target pages for such improvement.
    Template:Unsourced would probably work, but the vast majority of Wikipedia articles will have need this. There is a new WikiProject that aims to reference articles on Wikipedia. You could add an article to the "articles being worked on" section, or nominate it to be the biweekly special article. -[[User:Frazzydee|Frazzydee|✍]] 03:53, 25 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  3. One or more "collaborations of the week" (or month) for improving references and citation apparatus for particular articles.
  4. This may be very hard for pop culture topics or recent events. Some people feel that means those topics are unencyclopedic, although it is hard to imagine a general consensus on that. We could, however, decide that some subject matter is outside the scope of this forum, even if others in Wikpedia choose to work on these topics.

Various individuals have disagreed over whether it would be best to focus such effort on controversial or uncontroversial topics. Is there any reason why some people couldn't pursue the presumably calmer work on uncontroversial topics, while others work out how we can approach controversial topics?

Time periods

  1. Some articles reference the time period at which the article was written or modified without stating what that time period was, e.g. "Today, there is a drive to eat food from the inside out." I think that any time of article creation or editing shold be noted, e.g. "As of July 2005, there has been encouragement to note times of creations and edits of Wikipedia articles." (note that the Wikimarkup form of this link is [[As of 2005|As of July 2005]].) Otherwise a future reader has little idea of the currency of the information.

Referencing of Wikipedia articles

We seem to have consensus that as of November 2004 many Wikipedia articles are not yet worthy of being considered citable sources. We also seem to have consensus that it would be a very worthy goal to work out how to raise certain articles or, more precisely, certain versions of certain articles to the standard of citable, peer-reviewed literature (or to some other comparable standard). This seems closely related to the goal that some have characterized as "creating Wikipedia 1.0".

  1. Possibility of distinguishing draft articles and vetted articles.
    • Probably what we have now is a perfectly good mechanism for perpetual draft articles, so the question is how to manage vetted articles.
    • Various proposals in Wikipedia:Approval mechanism seem possibly relevant
    • Possible mechanisms for "tagging" vetted versions:
      • Software extensions for this purpose
      • Namespace distinction
      • Pages of pointers to vetted versions
  2. Who is appropriate to vet the articles? How can one define "serious and committed" editors? (All of these proposals are clearly controversial; there is no inherent reason multiple mechanisms could not be created for different "seals of approval")
    • Specific academic qualifications may be required; or alternately a history of good work on Wikipedia in that field.
    • Revealing one's actual identity (vs. strictly an online alias) may be required.
    • Groups might be chosen in a similar manner to how we already choose the ArbCom or Administrators; or alternately in the way we choose Mediators or Barnstar recipients.
    • We might be able to develop a system by which anyone could endorse a particular version of an article; presumably groups could form whose endorsement would carry some weight.
    • Rather than assume that this needs to be an elitist process, we could develop a more democratic system by which any logged on user could rate an article in a system of open voting such as the Article validation feature coded by Magnus Manske.

Editorial arbitration

For discussion see Wikipedia:Forum for Encyclopedic Standards/Editorial arbitration.

It has been variously suggested that the Forum for Encyclopedic Standards could lead to a means of settling content disputes: arbitrators with editorial discretion to focus on disputes concerning point of view, language, sources, factual accuracy, etc. The existing mediation mechanisms focus more on conduct than content, and the ArbCom even more so. It is possible that if we can establish groups that will be widely recognized as relatively unbiased and expert in certain areas that this will help build consensus. It is less obvious whether it will rein in any of the more blatant POV pushers, especially those with little concern for intellectual honesty. Still, there seems to be potential here, at least for experiment.

As vetting, there is a need to define "serious" editors, and the same set of questions arise, but with less opportunity of going several ways at once: we can't have five different arbitrators for the same matter.

Possible areas of particular focus:

  1. Modern history and politics
  2. Physics, Biology, Archeology
  3. Difficult-but-trendy theories : Semiotics, feminist and cultural theory, cutting-edge sociology and theoretical economics; philosophy in general
  4. Modern and ancient religion


Recruitment

172 suggested a process for recruiting editorial arbitrators (and immediately ruled himself out of such a role), perhaps along the lines of the elections to the board of the Wikimedia Foundation, and expressed a hope that a large share of the arbiters would be academics, with the Foundation nominating candidates to reach a consensus vote on the Wiki. 172 did not intend to indicate that these would be paid positions.

Other suggestions of a more open system, allowing anyone sufficiently active in the field on Wikipedia, or academics with demonstrable experience outside of Wikipedia, to contribute to these editorial discussions, would likely be a smaller and less controversial step.

Members

  1. Neutralitytalk
  2. —No-One Jones (m) 03:05, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  3. IZAK 03:08, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  4. Jayjg 03:28, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  5. GeneralPatton 03:30, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  6. Xed 03:31, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  7. Netoholic (talk)
  8. Mackensen (talk) 03:50, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  9. Adam 04:25, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC). I am delighted to see someone taking an initiative in this area. What Wikipedia needs more than anything else is a movement of genuine editors to insist on quality control and the weeding out of non-encyclopaedic editors. Incidentally, I could use some support at Wikipedia:Requests_for_mediation#User:Herschelkrustofsky_and_User:Adam_Carr. Adam 05:47, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  10. Jmabel | Talk 06:41, Nov 16, 2004 (UTC)
  11. JFW | T@lk 08:25, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  12. With some reservations, but I think this is an important step. Ambi 10:31, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  13. Noel (talk) 13:00, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC) - with some caveats, see the Talk: page.
  14. --user:Ed Poor (deep or sour) 15:01, Nov 16, 2004 (UTC) with nuanced reservations
  15. Cecropia | explains it all ® 17:21, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  16. The Uninvited Co., Inc. 21:12, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC). I think that these are good goals overall, and support many of them, though I do still support the "you can edit any article right now" model that has made Wikipedia successful.
  17. Amgine, echo UC above and question Adam's statement "weeding out ... editors", would rather weed out non-encyclopaedic content/submissions through a cultural intolerance of it.
  18. Slrubenstein 22:13, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC) I strongly support the more anarchic element of wikipedia, in which anyone can edit any article any time and all articles are works in process. But I am also committed to some basic wikipeida standards, especially NPOV, no original research, and verifiability. I think most people are vigilant about NPOV (although they may disagree on what it is or how to achieve it) but people are often very careless on the latter two standards. Still, I see this as a case of enforcing existing standards, not creating new ones.
  19. Tannin 23:27, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC). More in spirit than in reality these days, as non-Wikipedia projects consume almost all my time now. But, in broad, I support what SLR writes above and would hope to make some small contribution to this worthy project.
  20. I still support what Slrubenstein called "the more anarchic element of Wiki" and what uc called Wiki's "you can edit any article right now" model. I think that within this framework, though, it is possible to set up, e.g., a system of editorial arbitration reviewed by expert editors as an alternative to the Arbitration Committee. Such a committee would do a better job handeling, e.g., the disputes between Adam Carr and the LaRouche editors, as it would be able to take the quality of the articles into consideration (as opposed to behavioral matters like reversions, mediation, or civility)... The aftermath of the arbitration case between Adam Carr and User:Herschelkrustofsky, which left Adam scaling back his work while the LaRouche users are as active as ever, IMHO epitomizes the problems borne out of the lack of some sort of system of editorial review based on encyclopedic merit. 172 23:48, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  21. Danny 23:49, 16 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  22. Xtra 00:39, 17 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  23. Shane King I think it's clear something needs to be done in certain cases. Some articles get stuck unable to make any progress, others suffer the even worse fate of only those with (near) infinite time on their hands can contribute due to obstructionalists being prepared to sit there and put roadblocks up for others. I'm not yet sure whether this is the correct something, but it appears the best shot we have going at the moment, so I'm jumping on this horse and riding it for a while. 04:40, Nov 17, 2004 (UTC)
  24. J.K. [[]] 06:55, 17 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  25. Mustafaa 10:12, 17 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  26. Taxman 18:42, Nov 17, 2004 (UTC) I'm in, just saw this.
  27. I support a tiered system for articles, with an option to easilly vote on articles status within that system within the article itself (maybe on the talk page). [[User:Sam Spade|Vote Sam Spade for Arbiter!]] 18:49, 17 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  28. Slim I'm a new user but I've already been frustrated by ideology masquerading as fact. I like the idea that anyone can edit an article, which is what makes Wikipedia special, but there should be some form of expert review available so that the quality of articles can be assessed, rather than there simply being mediation between personalities. What counts is what the readers end up reading and it needs to be accurate, particularly because Wikipedia articles tend to come up early in Google searches. If Wikipedia spreads falsehoods, they'll be spread far and fast.
  29. PedanticallySpeaking
  30. I support this project in its stated goals, but not in the projected establishment of a second arbitration structure which duplicates jurisdiction nor in the use of "expertise" as a screen for POV editing. Fred Bauder 12:44, Nov 20, 2004 (UTC)
  31. ChrisG - wiki and quality: they are not incompatible.
  32. MathKnight 16:40, 20 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  33. Emsworth Articles on controversial subjects (e.g., Israel/Palestine, "creationism," George Bush) could benefit from the suggestions made above. Requiring PhDs for members of the review panels/committees, however, is a proposition I would not support, for it would involve the exclusion of other capable users. Rather than being officially hired, such a panel (if it is approved) could consist instead of users who have demonstrated both interest and expertise in various important topics. The committee should not be expected to rely on its own knowledge alone: rather, it should neutrally observe the facts presented and the references, and make its decision on that basis.
  34. RickK 23:53, Nov 23, 2004 (UTC) - I can copyedit and Google search with the best of them.
  35. Maurreen 04:01, 24 Nov 2004 (UTC)
  36. Lyellin 18:40, Nov 27, 2004 (UTC) - Copyediting,here we come.
  37. Moriori - particularly support Emsworth's remarks at 33, coupled with Adam's at 9.
  38. Somthing should be done. What exaclty, I don't know. [[User:BrokenSegue|BrokenSegue]]
  39. Pedant 00:38, 2004 Dec 1 (UTC) I support factuality in articles, if this forum can help to insure that, I'm all for it.
  40. [[User:Eequor|ᓛᖁ♀]]
  41. Wile E. Heresiarch 16:48, 4 Dec 2004 (UTC) In summary, I support a "you can edit almost any article immediately" policy. Contentious articles need a more disciplined editorial policy -- perhaps oversight by a committee, with one editorial committee per restricted page. Wile E. Heresiarch 16:48, 4 Dec 2004 (UTC)
  42. Paul August 21:23, Dec 7, 2004 (UTC)
  43. To echo some other comments, I'm unsure about methods (we aren't in the academy here, so we can't just transplant academic ideas wholesale), but I support standards which can be enforced in ways compatible with the spirit of Wikipedia. —Tkinias 21:49, 7 Dec 2004 (UTC)
  44. This is the way to go. Taku 04:02, Dec 8, 2004 (UTC)
  45. mydogategodshat 18:29, 8 Dec 2004 (UTC) - I wholeheartedly support the objectives of this forum. I am not sure about some of the suggested policies. I support those policies that can attain the objectives of academic excellence without abandoning the democratic ideals that Wikipedia has been built on.
  46. Zappaz 18:02, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC) - Don't throw the baby with the dirty water. Yes, we need to find a way to make WP better, but to resort to PhD elitism is a mistake IMO. Knowledge about many subjects not covered on paper encyclopedias, find their home in our project because people that are passionate about these subjects care to participate. The value of WP does not lay on "yet another article about G. W. Bush", but on the diversity of subjects developed by a sometimes riotous and unruly group of people that care. There are enough encyclopedias online out there, so let us not only make the best encyclopedia, but the most diverse, vast, and interesting one. --Zappaz 18:02, 10 Dec 2004 (UTC)
  47. Apwoolrich 22:19, 24 Dec 2004 (UTC)
  48. Golbez 18:52, Dec 25, 2004 (UTC)
  49. I make extensive use of bibliographic references. Alterego 21:50, 2004 Dec 30 (UTC)
  50. I'll do everything to fight the Encyclopedia of Rumours movement. --Pjacobi 22:02, 2005 Jan 2 (UTC)
  51. Your ideas interest me and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter. adamsan 15:36, 31 Dec 2004 (UTC)
  52. I support both quality and the wiki spirit. --L33tminion | (talk) 03:48, Jan 3, 2005 (UTC)
  53. mark 19:01, 9 Jan 2005 (UTC) Wikipedia needs to be trustworthy.
  54. WikiUser 18:25, 2 Feb 2005 (UTC)
  55. Oldak Quill 01:22, 23 Feb 2005 (UTC)
  56. E=MC^2 02:03, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC) I believe that this is an important step in refining Wikipedia.
  57. Trödel|talk 03:26, 10 Mar 2005 (UTC) I like this
  58. Yu Ninjie 08:52, 4 Apr 2005 (UTC)
  59. Shane Smith leave a message 15:42, 21 Apr 2005 (UTC) I share the sentiments of most people here, which is that it is important to keep Wikipedia valuable and free by (1) holding all users accountable to basic standards of verifiability and NPOVness and (2) encouraging anybody and everybody to participate
  60. +sj + Agree that a panel should consist of people who have demonstrated their interest and activity in writing about the field; and should act neutrally based on content and references, not on personal knowledge. Expertise helps to quickly identify good and bad sources, and to recognize competing 'schools' of thought when they appear.
  61. Possibly needs to be dual standards. Areas with a fanbase and popular culture will always attract more support and be more ephemeral. That's not altogether bad. Dlyons493 Talk 20:48, 1 October 2005 (UTC)
  62. nobs 21:06, 4 October 2005 (UTC) Definitely needed for the humanities.
  63. Joaquin Murietta 09:08, 24 October 2005 (UTC) I would like to join. The standards for articles varies considerably. Further, I think that an article about a book should be written by people who actually read the book.
  64. [[User:Mysekurity|Mysekurity]] [[additions | e-mail]] 04:46, 7 November 2005 (UTC) I've been meaning to join this for some time, yet keep forgetting. I feel passionately about making Wikipedia credible, and would love to help out.
  65. SEWilco 05:35, 7 November 2005 (UTC) Have been making progress on citation methods.
  66. I'll support anything that improves general article quality, including the use of experts as reviewers. Jeeb 00:32, 8 November 2005 (UTC)

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