For this project, you will add helpful quantitative data to a Wikipedia article about immigration, demonstrating both your ability to identify high-quality, relevant sources and concisely present information from descriptive or inferential statistics. This assignment is worth 75 points: 25 for process, and 50 for the article + memo.
Class Wikipedia Portal
Project Overview
Wikipedia Project Steps:
Note: this is also covered on our Wikipedia portal, but I thought it would be helpful to talk you through the process for this work.
- Identify a Wikipedia article related to class themes that needs more information
- Find a high-quality scholarly source related to the article topic (book chapter or article) that relies on quantitative data as evidence.
- Find a high-quality web source (Pew Research Center, the Migration Policy Institute, The World Bank, the CIA factbook) with quantitative information related to your article.
- Compose a well-written annotated bibliography entry for your scholarly source.
- Find a statistical examples from your scholarly source that can be incorporated as evidence to improve your Wikipedia article.
- Find a piece of quantitative evidence from a reliable Web source (PEW Research Center, the Migration Policy Institute, The World Bank, the CIA Factbook) that would improve your Wikipedia article.
- Following the Perdue OWL rules for writing with statistics, integrate these two pieces of quantitative evidence into your Wikipedia article (at least one two sentences for each example). Make sure that you introduce the evidence, and then explain what it means.
- For example: “Drawing on a 2005 survey of U.S. immigrant detention centers, political scientist [Name] found that X% of those detained were unaccompanied minors. [footnote with full citation] This suggests that…..
- All work live on Wikipedia, Project memo submitted to Moodle as a Pdf, and slide posted to our collaborative Google Slideshow before class on Friday, March 31.
Wikipedia Process Specifications
- Complete all of the required trainings on our class Wikipedia portal.
- Write thoughtful forum posts documenting your process and approach (Note: see schedule for full description/specifications).
- Wednesday, 3/1: Post critiquing your Immigration-themed Wikipedia article.
- Friday 3/10: post detailing your article improvement plans and two source annotations (See forum post instructions for what you’ll need to include for your annotation).
Wikipedia Article Improvement Specs
For your chosen Wikipedia article, you should:
- Present a piece of quantitative evidence from your relevant, high-quality scholarly source that improve your chosen Wikipedia entry’s coverage of immigration or immigrant communities.
- Present a piece of quantitative evidence from your relevant, high-quality web source.
- For each quantitative example you add, you must:
- Follow the Purdue OWL’s guidelines for writing with statistics (including using framing language to indicate the source of your data, explaining what the information means, and being clear about what population the data describes/whether it can be generalized.)
- Provide sufficient context to interpret the quantitative information and its significance.
- Clearly and concisely explain what the quantitative evidence means.
- Incorporate correctly formatted citations for each piece of new information (footnoted in the “Sources” section)
- Incorporate internal wikilinks where appropriate.
- Correct any factual errors, broken links, or inappropriate evidence
- Write with clarity and style, using the tone appropriate for Wikipedia.
Wikipedia Project Memo
This 2 to 3 page memo should devote a paragraph to each of the following seven questions:
- Why did you select this Wikipedia entry (or section from a larger article) to improve? What is the larger historical significance of this entry, and how does your work make it better?
- What state was the Wikipedia entry in before your intervention? What perspectives were represented? What types of evidence (qualitative, quantitative) were presented?
- How did you choose the quantitative sources you used as evidence for this Wikipedia entry? Why were these the best choice of evidence for improving your entry?
- Discuss the specific content you have learned through the Wikipedia project. For example, have you gone deeper in a topic and/or learned new material? Give particular tasks you performed or examples of things you did in this digital project and discuss how they helped in your learning of the material.
- Discuss the specific skills you have learned through the Wikipedia project. For example, have you further developed skills and/or learned new ones? Give particular tasks you performed or examples of things you did in this digital project and discuss how they helped in your development of old and/or new skills.
- Discuss how you think you will use the specific content and skills you developed through this digital project in the future. Give examples of courses, projects, or other areas where you think they could be of use.
- Did the fact that your Wikipedia contributions will be publicly available affect how you approached its design and execution? Give examples of discussions you had, considerations/decisions you made, or ways you anticipated others would use it.
All work live on Wikipedia, Project memo submitted to Moodle as a Pdf, and slide posted to our collaborative Google Slideshow by 9am on Friday, March 31.
Wikipedia Project Rubric
Criteria | Satisfactory | Good | Excellent |
---|---|---|---|
Choice of Quantitative Evidence | Your two quantitative sources meet the requirements for this project, but may not be the best choice to improve the article either because of their relevance or scope. | The quantitative evidence you preset is directly relevant, reliable, and improves the information presented about immigration. | Your selection of a scholarly source and high-quality web source to improve your Wikipedia article show your strong research skills and thoughtfulness in deciding what quantitative evidence is best to improve your article |
QL Communication & Presentation of Statistical Evidence | You incorporate 2 relevant quantitative examples, but need to present more contextual information to guide your reader about how to interpret them. Full citations. | Your Wikipedia additions present clear context for the 2 pieces of quantitative evidence your present about immigration. You make the take-away message of each statistic clear. Full citations. | Your Wikipedia writings present clear and complete introductions of the 2 examples of quantitative evidence your present about immigration. Your writing is explicit about how you’re using each statistic, what population it represents, and the link to the larger points of the article. Full citations. |
Project Memo | While your memo addresses most of the 7 questions, you could be more detailed and/or reflective in your assessment of your work. | Candid memo that shows how you applied historical thinking and quantitative literacy in your approach to this assignment. Completely addresses the 7 questions. | Thoughtful, reflective memo that demonstrates your historical thinking and quantitative literacy in explaining your choice of Wikipedia entry, initial issues with its coverage of immigration, and your strategies for improving it while following Wikipedia’s communication guidelines. |
Wikipedia Showcase | Your slide presents an overview of your work but needs development to highlight the larger contributions you made to public history. | Your slide fulfills all of the requirements and serves to engage your classmates in a discussion of your contributions and their larger historical significance | Your Google slide skillfully communicates your contributions to Wikipedia, explaining your research and writing strategy, and how your work contributes to improving representation of Latino immigration on Wikipedia. |
Wikipedia Conventions | Appropriate tone. Some understanding of Wikipedia mechanics. | Encyclopedic, neutral tone. Strong command of Wikipedia mechanics, including the use of formatting and footnotes. | Encyclopedic, neutral tone. Comprehensive command of Wikipedia mechanics, including the use of formatting, internal links, and footnotes. |
Finding Quantitative Sources
Scholarly (Peer Reviewed) Article on COW Databases
- Try “Historical Abstracts” “America History & Life” “International Political Science Abstracts” “SocINDEX with Full Text”
- Remember, you can click to search more than one of these databases at a time.
- Include the search term “Data or Statistics” to find quantitative sources
- Ultimately, you’re going to incorporate 2 specific pieces of quantitative evidence from this source.
Web Source
- Places to look for reliable, transparent data include:
- College of Wooster LibGuide Data & Statistics: Social Sciences
- You’ll incorporate one piece of statistical data from a reliable web source.