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<img alt="" height="1" width="1" />Engaging Undergrads with [b]Wikipedia[/b]
Scientific American (blog)
Longtime science blog readers will certainly remember the popular cognitive psychology blog Cognitive Daily, written by Greta and Dave Munger, that had a fantastic five-year run at Scienceblogs. ...



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thekohser
Comment:
QUOTE
thekohser 5:50 pm 11/21/2011

Wow, Professor Munger makes Wikipedia sound perfect. I wonder if there are any flaws in her class project to participate in Wikipedia? I wonder if there are any disappointments or setbacks regarding the content, whether we will ever hear about it in Scientific American? Because, I read elsewhere that there are a number of critically-important flaws in the Wikipedia system. Munger hasn’t encountered a one of them, it seems.
thekohser
Here's one article the class seems to have created.

Note that the subject of the article has only ever been mentioned in one of all Google's various books, and one published only in 2011, at that.

Who will nominate for deletion as non-notable this article about "Culture in music cognition"?
Ottava
Isn't the better question how will the APS respond when many of its members are banned like hundreds of professors and academics have been in the past?

In Wikipedia, it doesn't matter if you follow the rules, the policies, the standards, etc. when a person who is clearly putting in original research, plagiarism, vandalism, etc. isn't. Many times the regulars don't give a crap and would rather block the professor because the person doesn't fit in with their view of Wikiculture.
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