Notes

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Evaluating Sources and Articles Training Notes

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  • Articles are reviewed and given a rating from "Start" or "Stub" to "Good" or "Featured"
  • Information on Wikipedia must be cited from reliable sources
  • Plagiarism is serious and can occur more subtly than expected, such as through close paraphrasing
  • The subcategories of the "Historical development" section had information that seemed irrelevant and created confusion because the writing was not clear
  • For the "Areas of interest" section, the examples of research for each subcategory also seemed too superfluous
    • Why is the research mentioned significant and why did the writer(s) choose to discuss that research in the article? I don't think there are any answers to these questions
  • There is definitely close paraphrasing that needs to be reworked
  • Most citations do come from reliable academic presses
  • There are large paragraphs of information that are not supported by any citations or references
  • The article provides main goals of historical linguistics at the beginning but then does not address all of them in the rest of the article
  • The article does not explain how the "Sub-fields of study" are relevant to historical linguistics
    • Instead, they just seem like definitions or mini Wikipedia articles about the subjects
  • The "Evolutionary context" section is extremely short

Syntax Evaluation

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  • The subcategories that have been included seem relevant and the structure is pretty clear
  • The information is not supported by many references and citations though
  • The "Functionalist grammars" and "Stochastic/probabilistic grammars/network theories" sections are short
    • Also, the name of the second section is too long and convoluted