Business Coach

My article “Wiki-what-ia? Approaching Encyclopedia Entries in the Electronic Age” is now live in the May/June issue of Science Editor, the journal of the Council of Science Editors.

If you’re a CSE member, you can access it through the issue TOC.

Sneak peek:

With the era of e-communication in full swing, changes are showing up across the board in publishing. Editing and composition tools have morphed into something faster and more technologic, so it only makes sense that research tools would follow suit.

 

Enter Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.org), a free, collaboratively built online encyclopedia. Wikipedia, which was started in 2001, had nearly 1.5 million entries in English alone as of this writing and articles available in more than 100 languages.

 

Anyone with Internet access can edit, correct, or create entries, and more than 65,000 people around the world do so actively. Because of its wide content base and ready availability, Wikipedia is gaining speed as a resource for students and researchers. But does the communal, everyman approach to its writing make it a stronger source for information, or a weaker one?

And those of you who are CSE members, I’ll see you at the conference in Austin this weekend!