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12/7/2005
Earlier this week, Matt Drudge featured an odd news item about mysterious threats between Florida witches; threats communicated in notes wrapped around rocks and written in ancient Theban script. Of course, maybe the first thing everyone who read the story thought (I did.) was, why not use Wiccan powers to threaten each other? I mean, a note wrapped around a rock thrown through a window - how Muggle-ish.
I've known some Wiccans and I know, of course, that they do not do those kinds of things, but I grew up before it was socially acceptable to be anything other than what everyone else seemed to be, and I've apparently got my built-in preconceptions, just like others. But it was an unfortunate item to appear in any popular media at the same time as the biggest press that the Wikipedia has ever gotten--and pretty negative press at that.
I have no doubt that the huge number of Americans who still think that Saddam Hussein was the evil mind behind 9/11 will make the connection: Wicca/Wiki, and for a long time to come have bad attitudes toward a great tool.
I've found that on campus a person's knowledge of Wikipedia, prior to these events, varied widely among specific niches. If you are an information technologist of the CIO- or webmaster-type, you probably knew about it due to the work you perform every day. One of the two other user groups who knew of Wikipedia were the youngest students on campus, Millennials (basically students age 21 or younger), who have found it to be the most useful research tool available to them for school papers. The other group is faculty members, some of whom approve of the concept heartily, but many of whom have been annoyed by the fact that their students are using this non-verified major source of information.
Oh, and research librarians, of course. They know everything. Maybe writers, too: It's certain that when I want to learn about something new that is more focused than I can get to in a single Google search, I am off to Wikipedia at once, at least as a place to start.
But it has until this week remained relatively unknown to most people. Nearly every person who I've ever mentioned Wikipedia to in the past couple of months has said "Huh?" or "What?"
But I had spent some time in Wikipedia, and have noticed that some of the articles about higher education institutions contain information that the institutional leaders might not think appropriate. That led me to lead the "SCUP Links" section of the Society for College and University Planning's "SCUP Email News" weekly (free) email newsletter each of the previous two weeks with a note that folks should take a closer look at the "article" in Wikipedia about their own college or university. (This was before the recent news broke.)
There's no way for me to measure it, of course, but I'd be willing to bet now that way more than half of the people who have heard of Wikipedia have a negative attitude about it. And those are probably the people who know the least about it, who have just learned of it. What's the story behind the negative press for Wikipedia?
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