Hello Bella, this is Waldon. So, first off, you don't have any in-text citations. The bots will tag your page as not having sources, even though you have them at the bottom because the bots look for in-text citations. Essentially, after each sentence you want to cite, you just throw in your citation and it will automatically group all citations at the bottom in the references section. If you want to reuse your citations, you can make a citation tag, and then reuse the tag later in your work. If you need help with this, I would be happy to. Also, since you posted it as your "user info" you need to actually transfer it to your sandbox first, then publish it. Once published, you go in and delete the userdata tags which are autogenerated. At the moment, your page essentially exists only as a blogpost, the rest of Wikipedia does not know it even exists. Looks really good though, just the whole mess of basically having to learn how to code a webpage using wikitext that DEFINITELY was not part of the class description. Sorsivnon Sali (talk) 21:58, 23 April 2020 (UTC)Reply

More about citations

edit

So, in looking back at your citations, you seem to have the reftags down, but when you post it, the page will probably want you to pipe the citations and categorize them. I didn't find any citations on other websites that use comma notation, they all use wikitext (coding language that wikipedia uses, basically. it isn't really) basically, the citations would look something like : <ref> {{citation | author = Phil Gruen | title = Reading the american landscape | year = 2020 | publisher = Washington State University | access-date = 23 April 2020}} </ref> This is basically what you would put in the body of the page, where the citation is, and if you wanted to use the same source again, you would have to change the <ref> tag to something like <ref name = reading the american landscape> and then whenever you wanted to reuse that citation, you would just type <ref name = reading the american landscape/> and it would automatically connect the two citations in your citations section. Sorsivnon Sali (talk) 22:20, 23 April 2020 (UTC)Reply

Albert W. Thompson Hall moved to draftspace

edit

An article you recently created, Albert W. Thompson Hall, does not have enough sources and citations as written to remain published. It needs more citations from reliable, independent sources. (?) Information that can't be referenced should be removed (verifiability is of central importance on Wikipedia). I've moved your draft to draftspace (with a prefix of "Draft:" before the article title) where you can incubate the article with minimal disruption. When you feel the article meets Wikipedia's general notability guideline and thus is ready for mainspace, please click on the "Submit your draft for review!" button at the top of the page. Sulfurboy (talk) 10:59, 1 May 2020 (UTC)Reply

Your draft article, Draft:Albert W. Thompson Hall

edit
 

Hello, Bellayglesias. It has been over six months since you last edited the Articles for Creation submission or Draft page you started, "Albert W. Thompson Hall".

In accordance with our policy that Wikipedia is not for the indefinite hosting of material deemed unsuitable for the encyclopedia mainspace, the draft has been nominated for deletion. If you plan on working on it further, or editing it to address the issues raised if it was declined, simply edit the submission and remove the {{db-afc}}, {{db-draft}}, or {{db-g13}} code.

If your submission has already been deleted by the time you get there, and you wish to retrieve it, you can request its undeletion by following the instructions at this link. An administrator will, in most cases, restore the submission so you can continue to work on it.

Thank you for your submission to Wikipedia! UnitedStatesian (talk) 15:26, 30 November 2020 (UTC)Reply