Submitted by codenamendgo t3_11dgcvm in LifeProTips
The first thing I learned about scholarly research in college is that you never cite Wikipedia as a source. However, you do go to the resources at the bottom of the page and start your research there. For a majority of Wikipedia topics you will find scholarly resources under the resources tab. From there, you use those scholarly resources to find more resources in their work's cited until you find the information you're looking for. Scholarly research is not as hard or scary as it sounds, I promise!
radieck t1_ja8optv wrote
Scholarly work should not use Wikipedia as a source but the sources wiki uses can be a great starting point. I 100% agree.
I used to tell my students that Wikipedia is great for general information since the site has clamped down on the whole editing process, and made it much more difficult to add misinformation without sources.
For non-scholarly work, Wikipedia is amazing. It’s the end all, be all of all arguments and general information about organizations and people. I think because schools say you can’t cite it, many people don’t trust Wikipedia. I’d trust it over most news sites (except AP and Reuters).