Evaluating Wikipedia as a Self-Learning Resource for Statistics: You Know They'Ll Use It

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Evaluating Wikipedia as a Self-Learning Resource for Statistics: You Know They'Ll Use It - scientific work related to Wikipedia quality published in 2017, written by Peter K. Dunn, Margaret Marshman and Robert McDougall.

Overview

ABSTRACTThe role of Wikipedia for learning has been debated because it does not conform to the usual standards. Despite this, people use it, due to the ubiquity of Wikipedia entries in the outcomes from popular search engines. It is important for academic disciplines, including statistics, to ensure they are correctly represented in a medium where anyone can assume the role of discipline expert. In this context, authors first develop a tool for evaluating Wikipedia articles for topics with a procedural component. Then, using this tool, five Wikipedia articles on basic statistical concepts are critiqued from the point of view of a self-learner: “arithmetic mean,” “standard deviation,” “standard error,” “confidence interval,” and “histogram.” Authors find that the articles, in general, are poor, and some articles contain inaccuracies. Authors propose that Wikipedia be actively discouraged for self-learning (using, for example, a classroom activity) except to give a brief overview; that in more formal learning environments...