Jump to content

Africa Growth Pilot/Online self-paced course/Module 4/Conclusion

From Meta, a Wikimedia project coordination wiki

In conclusion, I remind you: you need to use reliable sources in order to support the Wikipedia Voice prose that you add to Wikipedia. If you don't know if a source is reliable, please, please, please, ask for help. If you for some reason refuse to do it on-wiki -- and I really think none of you should refuse -- but if you do refuse to do it on-wiki, at least use some circle of peers, a Telegram channel, a Facebook group, whatever works for you, to ask for help from more experienced users. You can also ask for help finding sources with this link. If you cannot find the sources, don't add that content. And when you make mistakes, it's not the end of the world -- you can apologize, you can undo them, you can do better next time. Just like about Neutral Point of View.


Until you understand the Notability policy well, we would like you to consider editing and improving existing articles more than creating new articles. And how can you find articles to improve? How can you know, what are some articles that could really use improvement?

And to that, I have a couple of answers that I will quickly go through. There are quite a few tools that help you find articles that you could work on, and I'm going to breeze through them: