Conclusions


There seems to be a flux of nominations of "lists of schools" lately. I believe we need to establish the criteria for such lists. It has already been previously established that lists are encyclopedia. -- AllyUnion (talk) 06:25, 5 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Copied from Wikipedia talk:Deletion policy on Lists of schools in X

Personally, I think a category is much more appropriate than an article. Carrp | Talk 05:23, 21 Feb 2005 (UTC)

Copied from Wikipedia talk:Deletion policy on Lists of schools in X

There are several arguments which could be used to support the case that such lists are unencyclopedic and may not be appropriate for Wikipedia. They might include:
  • An analogy to Wikipedia is not the Yellow Pages. If that rule is appropriate for commercial enterprises, ought we to have a similar standard for public institutions?
  • Questions about the inherent difficulties in maintaining and protecting such very large lists from vandalism. (a logical extension of Wikipedia:Verifiable) Is it even theoretically possible to know whether a fake school was added to the list? Can we really assume that there will be enough knowledgable reader/editors to keep that specific page on their watchlist that every municipality in the country will be covered? You are talking about many thousands of municipalities after all.
  • Questions about the influence of the list on the creation of inappropriate spin-off articles. For example, if I see such a list, am I more likely to add a link and then create an entry for my very small elementary school (which our general concensus says is inappropriate) and, when my article is promptly deleted, do more harm than good to our reputation and relationship with a future editor?
I don't know that the arguments would win the day. There are equally good counter-arguments. But the question certainly can be tested through the VfD process. Reasonable people can disagree. As a community, we generally come to some pretty good decisions.
I will add that I consider such calls for "censure" to be inappropriate and unnecessarily hostile. Depending on the exact wording and context in the discussion, they may even be considered border-line trollish and weighted downward by the deciding admin. Rossami (talk) 03:30, 23 Feb 2005 (UTC)

when lists are encyclopedic[edit]

There's a question being asked "are list of schools in X encyclopedic" which I think is misguided. The answer is some is and some aren't. A better question is "when are such lists encyclopedic". Here are a list of criteria I think a list should have to be encyclopedic:

Mozzerati 21:55, 2005 Mar 6 (UTC)

lists which don't fulfill these criteria and don't look likely to in the near future should be deleted. Lists which do fulfill these criteria should not be.

Categories versus Lists[edit]

There seems to be this argument of favoring categories over lists... Shouldn't that also be taken by a case by case basis as well? I agree with Mozzerati's above point, and I believe it should be considered when deciding the inclusion of lists of schools. -- AllyUnion (talk) 05:05, 15 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Comment/Question[edit]

Before debating a policy over lists of schools, shouldn't we form a policy on school articles themselves? This is a constant bane of VfD and a worked-out policy would be a great thing to have. It makes sense neither to allow lists (the elements of which will be constantly challenged) nor to disallow lists until the critiera for inclusion of the subject of the lists has been worked out. Or, if this was done somewhere (not here apparently) when I was not looking, please set me straight and point me there. Jgm 15:06, 17 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Are red links really the issue?[edit]

I strongly concur with the points raised by Mozzerati and Radiant! in the main section of this discussion page. However, I wonder if the problem with lists is really the amount of red links. Is there a policy that I am not familiar with that states all items in a list must necessarily be constructed as links? Couldn't some of those be left as text-only, no link - namely, those that refer to schools that are not notable enough to deserve an individual article?

Maybe a policy that allows compreehensive but less informative listings when links are restricted to notable schools (even if yet unwritten) could be a reasonable compromise. Of course, this would lead us to the real issue pointed out by Jgm above, namely, whether any school is inherently notable. vlad_mv 16:06, 18 Mar 2005 (UTC)

There is no reason why you couldn't have some items in a list linked while others are not. For an example that I've worked on, see the lists on the Putnam competition page. Some of the past winners are definitely encyclopedic, others might be, most certainly are not. I tried to go through and research them, and made links to those that sounded particularly notable. Isomorphic 07:00, 22 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Some redlinks do cause the repeated creation of nonsense articles, but they are easily identified during RC patrol--you just look at the deletion history and see a whole list. From this just take a look at "what links here" and amend any likely articles to remove the double-square brackets from the redlink, annotating to explain why you're doing it. It isn't necessary to adopt the attitude that all redlinked lists are wrong. This is a wiki and we should be encouraging, not discouraging, the creation of new articles. --Tony SidawayTalk 13:55, 13 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]