Page values for "Submissions:2023/Keeping Wikipedia relevant for today's post-secondary students"

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"2023_submissions" values

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FieldField typeValue
titleStringKeeping Wikipedia relevant for today's post-secondary students
statusStringDeclined
themeStringCommunity Initiatives, Education, Equity / Inclusion / Community Health
typeStringLightning talk
abstractWikitext

For many years, the common refrain was that Wikipedia could not be trusted. When I joined Wiki Education in 2014, I regularly encountered faculty who questioned Wikipedia's reliability and trustworthiness. Almost a decade later, I find fewer and fewer individuals who question Wikipedia's accuracy and integrity. There has truly been a dramatic mind shift in how academia relates to Wikipedia. The challenge today is no longer whether Wikipedia can be trusted, but rather how to make Wikipedia relevant to today's students.

Wikipedia is not necessarily the go-to for today's students at the post-secondary level. They are seeking information elsewhere and most often from social media platforms where misinformation is easily spread. In this lightning talk, I'll explore how Wikipedia now faces a crisis of relevance for today's students. I'll discuss the critical role the Wikipedia Student Program can play in making Wikipedia a central part of the information landscape in higher education

authorStringHelaine Blumenthal
emailList of Email, delimiter: ,helaine@wikiedu.org
usernameStringHelaine (Wiki Ed)
affiliatesStringWiki Education
timeString5 minutes
requestsWikitext
presentedWikitext
livestreamBooleanYes
videoString