Chapter 1, What's in Wikipedia?
Chapter 2, The World Gets a Free Encyclopedia
Chapter 3, Finding Wikipedia's Content
Chapter 4, Understanding and Evaluating an Article
Table of Contents
- 1. What's in Wikipedia?
- 1. Types of Articles
- 2. Article and Content Inclusion Policies
- 2.1. Core Policies: V, NOR, and NPOV
- 2.2. Understanding the Policies
- 2.3. Other Guidelines
- 2.3.1. Notability
- 2.3.2. Copyrighted Material
- 2.3.3. Non-encyclopedic Content
- 2.4. What Wikipedia Is Not
- 3. Non-article Content
- 3.1. Types of Non-article Pages
- 3.2. Namespaces
- 3.2.1. List of Namespaces
- 4. Summary and What to Read Next
- 2. The World Gets a Free Encyclopedia
- 1. Wikipedia's Mission
- 2. Wikipedia's Roots
- 2.1. Ancient Greece to Today: Encyclopedias
- 2.2. Late 17th Century: The Modern Encyclopedia
- 2.3. Wikipedia as an Encyclopedia
- 2.4. The 1960s and 1970s: Unix, Networks, and Personal Computers
- 2.5. The 1980s: The Free Software Movement
- 2.5.1. Wikipedia and the Free Perspective
- 2.6. 1995: Ward's Wiki
- 2.7. 1997: Open Source Communities
- 2.8. 2000: Online Community Dynamics
- 2.8.1. Wikipedia as a Wiki Community
- 2.9. 2001: Wikipedia Goes Live
- 2.10. Wikipedia Today
- 2.11. Unfinished Business
- 3. The Wikipedia Model Debated
- 3.1. Misinformation: The Seigenthaler Scandal
- 3.2. Amateur Contributors, Authority, and Academia
- 3.2.1. Wikipedia and Academic Authority
- 3.2.2. Wikipedia and Experts
- 3.2.3. Case Studies in Academic Authority
- 3.2.4. Pseudonyms and Claimed Expertise
- 3.2.5. The Crowd of Amateurs
- 4. Summary
- 3. Finding Wikipedia's Content
- 1. Searching Wikipedia
- 1.1. Basic Searching
- 1.1.1. Varying the Search
- 1.1.2. Search Operators
- 1.1.3. Searching Other Namespaces
- 1.1.4. Some Special Searches
- 1.1.5. Search Problems and Some Alternatives
- 1.2. External Search Engines
- 1.2.1. When to Use External Search Engines
- 1.2.2. When Not to Use External Search Engines
- 2. Ways into Wikipedia
- 2.1. Welcome to the Main Page
- 2.1.1. Navigating the Main Page
- 2.1.2. Portals into the Encyclopedia
- 2.1.3. Daily Content
- 2.1.4. Constructing the Main Page
- 2.1.5. Disclaimers, License, and Privacy
- 2.2. The Omnipresent Sidebar
- 2.2.1. Navigation
- 2.2.2. Interaction
- 2.2.3. Recent Changes
- 2.2.4. The Search Box
- 2.2.5. Toolbox
- 2.2.6. Languages
- 3. Joys of Hypertext
- 3.1. A Hypertext Primer
- 3.2. Three Types of Links
- 3.3. Browsing by Topic
- 3.3.1. Lists of Articles
- 3.3.2. Traditional Classification Schemes
- 3.3.3. Date-Related Articles
- 3.4. Browsing by Categories
- 3.4.1. Structure of a Category Page
- 3.4.2. Navigating Categories
- 3.4.3. A Longer Journey Using Categories
- 3.5. Browsing by Page Type
- 3.5.1. Finding Excellent or Poor Content
- 3.5.2. Finding Images
- 3.5.3. Finding Media Files
- 4. Summary
- 4. Understanding and Evaluating an Article
- 1. Anatomy of an Article
- 1.1. The Article Text
- 1.2. Backlinks
- 1.3. Article History
- 1.3.1. Reading a Page History
- 1.3.2. Analyzing a Page History
- 1.3.3. Edit Summaries and Minor Edits
- 1.4. Talk Pages
- 1.4.1. Reading and Contributing to Talk Pages
- 1.4.2. Making Good Use of Talk Pages
- 2. Evaluating Articles
- 2.1. Misinformation, Missing Information, and Mistakes
- 2.2. D-R-E-W-S
- 2.2.1. Discussion on the Talk Page
- 2.2.2. Ratings
- 2.2.3. Edit History
- 2.2.4. Writing and Formatting
- 2.2.5. Sources
- 3. Summary
- 4. Final Thoughts for Part I