Wikipedia and other online research sources were yesterday blamed for Scotland’s falling exam pass rates. The Scottish Parent Teacher Council (SPTC) said pupils are turning to websites and internet resources that contain inaccurate or deliberately misleading information before passing it off as their own work. The group singled out online encyclopedia Wikipedia, which allows entries to be logged or updated by anyone and is not verified by researchers, as the main source of information. Standard Grade pass rates were down for the first time in four years last year and the SPTC is now calling for pupils to be given lessons on using the internet appropriately for additional research purposes ‘before the problem gets out of hand’. Eleanor Coner, the SPTC’s information officer, said: ‘Children are very IT-savvy, but they are rubbish at researching. The sad fact is most children these days use libraries for computers, not the books. We accept that as a sign of the times, but schools must teach pupils not to believe everything they read. ‘It’s dangerous when the internet is littered with opinion and inaccurate information which could be taken as fact. ‘Internet plagiarism is a problem. Pupils think ‘I’ll […]
Monday, June 23rd, 2008
Falling Exam Passes Blamed on Wikipedia ‘Littered With Inaccuracies’
Author: MARTYN McLAUGHLIN
Source: The Scotsman (Scotland)
Publication Date: 21-Jun-08
Link: Falling Exam Passes Blamed on Wikipedia ‘Littered With Inaccuracies’
Source: The Scotsman (Scotland)
Publication Date: 21-Jun-08
Link: Falling Exam Passes Blamed on Wikipedia ‘Littered With Inaccuracies’
Stephan: From my personal experience, when I have checked Wikipedia, on every subject about which I am knowledgeable, I have been appalled at the misinformation, distortions, and outright nonsense I have found. I warn everyone not to rely in anyway on something you see on Wikipedia, particularly if it is a controversial subject about which people have heavy biases, and much passion. There are people with nothing better to do with their lives than attempt to insert those biases into Wikipedia files.