User:Sminthopsis84

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Sminthopsis crassicaudata
, a mammal not entirely unlike the owner of this user page (please note the ferocious insectivore teeth)

I've been editing Wikipedia since 2006, but only since 2012 under this signon. I'm happy to help new editors with what I know, if you leave a message on my talk page.

Sorry, however, I don't get involved with
species concepts and its standardized common names
.

User:Ocotea is a signon that I use for lengthy cleanup efforts so that the watchlist for that signon doesn't become muddled with the watchlist for this one.

Warning to teachers and to would-be editors of technical content

In the English Wikipedia it is not possible in practice to stop technical content in the

Wikipedia:NOTJOURNAL policy supports destruction of accuracy, and its antidote, the Wikipedia:Ignore all rules
policy, is rarely effective in arguments on talk pages.

By "technical content" I am using the definition from

WP:NOTJOURNAL
as of 28 April 2015, namely any text that cannot be "written on the assumption that the reader will not or cannot follow [the] [hyper]links, instead attempting to infer their meaning from the text" where the reader is defined as "any literate reader of Wikipedia without any knowledge in the given field".

Although I have little experience in either, I think that Wikiquote and Wiktionary still value accuracy. Wikispecies is founded on the one-true-taxonomy philosophy and is thus no place for a biologist to venture. The best advice I can offer for Wikipedia editors is that it is still possible to write accurate material that lasts on the talk page associated with each content page, perhaps under a heading such as "Don't believe what it says on the page". It should be possible to make a request to alter the Wikipedia:NOTJOURNAL policy, e.g. here, but these are dismissed as content disputes that don't belong on a talk page about policy.

About me

Wikipedia has made me enthusiastic about using a pseudonym, a pseudonym that can have an extensive history attached to it, as this one now does, but which I've found from experience provides an important comfort factor compared to editing under my real name. Here, as elsewhere, there are people who are made uncomfortable by this, who complain that they can't have a discussion with someone whose genetic background they know nothing about, but I have no sympathy whatever for that point of view.

Professionally, I'm a systematic botanist, but I may edit in places that are unexpected even to me. In rough sequence from most to least editing effort (not necessarily number of edits), I usually work on:

Thoughts about editing Wikipedia

I wish that people here were polite more of the time. Many editors that I've interacted with are wonderful, but too many are either trying to spoil the experience for others, or might as well be trying to because they are so rude.

I consider myself a content editor, interested in helping to build Wikipedia into an important educational resource, particularly for the large number of teachers who have few other resources. I rarely get involved in arguments unless there seems to be some way that I can settle them using research in published sources. I am likely to back away from pages that I would very much like to improve because somebody that I consider unreasonable has taken control of the page, but will fight back when I can see an effective and rational way to do so.

I would love to see an effective horde of scientists contributing here, but find that I completely agree with another editor whose essay warns academic people away from trying to do any good here. The same element that one encounters when teaching, people who attack you in unreasonable ways because you have knowledge (is it jealousy?), seems to be particularly common here. Knowledgeable people should be warned, but I hope that isn't completely discouraging, just a hint to go slowly and not expect unbounded success.

Editing Wikipedia can be personally rewarding. Some of us have discussed the way that Wikipedia can become part of one's personal filing system: adding interesting material here can be one of the most effective steps toward finding that information later when you want it. Humour department: the very first edit that I made in Wikipedia was because of the need to set a journal editor straight about a term that I'd used in a manuscript (I told him that I'd added the material with citations here).


Essential reading before venturing into Wikipedia editing: Shoggoth.

Ideas for a user box to helpfully indicate an editor's mental state, but that haven't yet reached the design stage:

Pet peeves:

Committed identity: 03f07e169705138a27c81f1dd76728237f0c151a30267152dd06d55bdfdea7fb306284a09ab41aa89f5b7653e182307d6e319525833c7d8d358fb88efb7ebe32 is a commitment to this user's real-life identity.