• krypt@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    growing up I got taught by teachers not trust Wiki bc of misinformation. times have changed

      • krypt@lemmy.world
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        10 hours ago

        subject at hand was wikipedia, but it applies to any wiki format I guess - just check sources.

    • setVeryLoud(true);@lemmy.ca
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      20 hours ago

      Nope, we all misunderstood what they meant. Wikipedia is not an authoritative source, it is a derivative work. However, you can use the sources provided by the Wikipedia article and use the article itself to understand the topic.

      Wikipedia isn’t and was never a primary source of information, and that is by design. You don’t declare information in encyclopedias, you inventory information.

      • krypt@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        “Nope” to what exactly? you regurgitated what I said - but told us how you misunderstood it

      • shalafi@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Wikipedia was not then what it is now. You’re spot on with all that, spot on, but in the early days it wasn’t nearly as trustworthy.

        • setVeryLoud(true);@lemmy.ca
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          20 hours ago

          Fair enough, I’m not old enough to remember those days of Wikipedia, my memory starts in roughly 2010 wrt Wikipedia use 😅

          • ɯᴉuoʇuɐ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            17 hours ago

            You can check old versions of any article by clicking ‘history’. And yeah, the standards used to be pretty low.

      • unphazed@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        We homeschool our daughter. Saw a cool history through film course that taught with an example movie every week to grow interest… nothing in the itinerary said they’d play a video of Columbus by PragerU. They refused the refund, as it was 2 weeks in, and said it was used to foment conversation, but no other video was being offered or no questions were prepared to challenge the children. I worded my letter to call out the facts about Columbus vs the video, and the lack of accreditation of the source. I tried not to be the “lib”, but I very much got the gist that’s their opinion of me, and how they brushed me off. That fucking site is a plague on common sense, decency, and truth. Still fired up, and it was last month. We pulled her out of the course immediately after the video.

        • Devmapall@lemmy.zip
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          21 hours ago

          I can’t imagine homeschooling. Not that I think it’s bad but that it has to be so hard to do. And harder still to do it right.

          Glad you pulled out of that course. PragerU is hot garbage and I hate how my autocorrect apparently knows PragerU and didn’t try to change it to something else.

          How hard do you find it to homeschool? How many hours do you reckon it takes a day?

          • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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            17 hours ago

            You’ve gotta keep in mind that in a regular school your kid is one of 20-30 for the teacher and they are lucky if they get five minutes of individual help/instruction. Everything else is just lecture, reading, and assignments.

            It doesn’t have to be onerous. We homeschooled until around 3rd grade. Even so, the other kids they are in school with are academically… not stellar. My youngest (13) has a reading disability and she struggles to pass classes. She still frequently finds herself helping out other students because they are even worse off.

            I’m not anti-public education, but whether it’s Covid or just republicans gutting the system, public education is in a state right now. I figure funding needs to increase by 30-50%. Kids need more resources than they are getting. And until they do, homeschooling isn’t an unreasonable option. But it’s not for everyone, of course. One parent has to work (or not) from home or odd hours.