Wikipedia:Nominating good articles

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The following are tips for avoiding common mistakes when nominating an article at

Good article criteria
.

Before nominating: review your own article

The easiest way to avoid problems with a nomination is to put yourself in the reviewer's position. Read the guidelines on reviewing Good articles and the

Good article criteria
, and check that if you were reviewing your own article, you would pass it. Do not think of your goal purely in terms of getting the article listed as a Good article: your goal is to get good feedback on the article, and hopefully, perhaps after some improvements, get it listed.

There are several problems which crop up frequently. Make sure you avoid them.

Clean-up tags

If there are valid clean-up tags on your article, including

Fact
tags, then you need to address the issue(s) raised before nominating the article.

Instability

If the article is unstable due to work being done, such as:

  • an
    edit war
    among regular editors,
  • frequent editing due to a current event,
  • a major expansion or reorganization (either underway or being planned), or
  • proposed merges and splits,

then the nomination might also be failed without a thorough review, and you won't get the feedback you need. Try to resolve such issues before nominating. Obvious vandalism, even at high rates, does not count against the article.

Article length

Although there is no set guideline on article length for GAs, it is best for the article not to be too short or so long that there is not enough focus on the topic. The article should be broad, covering multiple areas to give readers an overview of the topic.

Lead

The

lead
(introduction) should summarize the topic by touching on all of the various sections within the article. For articles of various lengths, guidelines recommend that the lead range from one to four paragraphs.

Images

Carefully scrutinize any non-free images against

WP:CAPTIONS
.

If possible, use only free images that are available/applicable to the article's topic. Look for images already located on related Wikipedia articles or search Wikimedia Commons. If there are no images available, consider uploading an image of your own if you have the permission or ask the permission of an author of an image on websites such as Flickr.

Inline citations

Articles are expected to be well-supported by

verifiability policy
requires a source to be named for all direct quotations and any statement that a reader is likely to dispute, such as statistical information (ex: 47% of all goods were sold; 3 million people attended the event; the city sustained $588 million in damages).

Editors may use any style of referencing and any method of presenting citations that they choose, so long as the article is internally consistent. Well-developed articles generally use some form of inline referencing, which allows the readers and future editors to identify which specific source(s) support any given statement. The two most common inline reference styles are

deprecated as of September 2020
.

  • The footnote system uses <ref> tags to create a clickable link following the assertion that it supports. Either full citations or
    WP:REFNAME
    for more details.
  • The parenthetical system places the full citation in an alphabetical, bulleted list near the end of the article. Within the article text, a shortened citation names the author, (usually) year, and page number in parentheses, like this: (Ritter 2002, p. 45). If parenthetical references are used inline, then the footnote system can be easily used for any necessary explanatory notes.

Citations to online materials should be written out in full, in whatever style you are using, instead of simply including a bare URL. Whether you choose to manually format the full citation or use a

citation template
is your choice. Both of these examples (at lines #1 and #2) produce identical-looking citations for the reader (shown at #3):

  1. Tanner, Lindsey. (08 February 2008) [http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2008-02-08-wii-rehabilitation_N.htm "Doctors use Wii games for rehab therapy"] at [[USAToday.com]]. Retrieved on 10 February 2008.
  2. {{cite news |last=Tanner |first=Lindsey |title=Doctors use Wii games for rehab therapy |publisher=[[USAToday|USAToday.com]] |date= 8 February 2008 |url=http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2008-02-08-wii-rehabilitation_N.htm |accessdate=10 February 2008}}
  3. Tanner, Lindsey (8 February 2008). "Doctors use Wii games for rehab therapy".
    USAToday.com
    . Retrieved 10 February 2008.

Whatever method you use for formatting, providing full citations is strongly preferred to providing only a bare URL, which appears to the reader as either this: [1] or as http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/2008-02-08-wii-rehabilitation_N.htm

When trying to find sources of information for an article, use a variety of resources such as books, websites, newspapers, journals, interviews, etc. Consider using a local library for researching information in printed resources. To find online resources, use websites such as

dead link for a source, the Internet Archive
may be able to provide an earlier version of the article. Other options for finding information include asking members of a related WikiProject, asking experts of the topic you are researching, or asking editors who have edited similar or related articles.

Brief fixes

Although the Manual of Style is comprehensive in improving every aspect of an article, a nomination does not need to meet every MoS guideline to reach GA status. However, the more accurately and uniformly the article follows these guidelines, the greater the benefit for its readers. A few common Manual of Style errors are listed below.

The

Good article criteria
, and therefore compliance with it is, strictly speaking, optional. However, since you want the article to be in good shape, it's still a good idea to take a look at the external links.

Location of links

Such links belong either in an

stock trading websites to the names of things mentioned in the text, like this: "Meta-Wiki is an organization that..." or "Apple Inc. (NasdaqAAPL
) is a publicly traded company". Such links should be moved to the appropriate infobox and/or external links section instead.

Choice of links

If the subject of the article has an official website, that website should normally be linked. Otherwise, do not include too many external links, but consider providing enough high-quality links that a reader could easily find more information on the topic. Webpages that are used to support text in an article should generally not be duplicated in the external links section. No article is required to have any external links, and every external link must be justifiable. Common errors are listed at

WP:ELNO
.

Waiting for a review

Depending on the subject area, it may take up to a couple of months before a review starts. If you want to speed this process, you can contact any related

WikiProjects
to remind them that the article is in the nominations queue.

You can also learn more about reviews and help others by reading and commenting on the GA reviews that are underway for similar articles. Anyone may comment at a GA review, not just reviewers or nominators.

During the review

The only required job of a nominator is to nominate the article. All editors are welcome to comment in reviews and to help improve nominated articles.

Reviewers

The only way for a nominated article to be listed as a Good article is for a reviewer to look over the article and make sure that it complies with the

see below
. If an article is placed on hold, the reviewer believes that the article is close to passing, but several issues need to be addressed before the reviewer will pass it.

Reviewers want articles to pass, but they may see problems or areas for improvement in nominated articles that conflict with the good article criteria. After putting an article on hold, the reviewer will mention issues/suggestions on the review page of the article that should be addressed by the editors at the article. Some issues may be raised concerning the GA criteria, MoS mistakes, or areas of incompleteness. If editors disagree with a particular suggestion, they should explain their rationales on the talk page, ask for further clarification, seek another editor's opinion, or, as a last resort, use

good article reassessment
.

It is best to be respectful to reviewers. Anyone can make a mistake, and the best way to prevent or solve problems is for all parties to assume good faith. Remember that reviewing articles can be a difficult task, and the number of reviewers is limited. Attacking reviewers may remove them from the process, which will extend the time for articles to be reviewed and reflect badly on the GA process.

After the review

Pass

If your article passes, there are multiple things you can do. First, make sure that the reviewer adds the article to the list of good articles at

WP:GA, and all WikiProject banners on the talk pages are updated to reflect the GA status. Keep the article on your watchlist to watch out for vandalism, POV, or removal of content. Consider adding a GA userbox
for your user page documenting your achievement, and alert WikiProjects related to the article. They may be interested in mentioning the improvement of the article within their newsletter or spotlight department.

Another option after the article passes is to improve the article further to reach A and/or

Featured article candidates
if you believe it meets the criteria.

Fail

If the article you are working on fails, there are several options available. If issues that a reviewer brought up were not addressed, consider fixing any problems that were raised and renominating the article again at GAN. For further improvement, have a few independent editors or volunteers from

Peer review
look over the article for you to give it a copyedit and point out where the article needs modifications.

If you disagree with a reviewer's assessment of an article, you can seek mediation at

Good article reassessment
. This process will have multiple editors look over the article and determine if the original reviewer misinterpreted the GA criteria or performed an improper review. Although it is possible that the initial review of the article may be overturned, it is also possible that several editors may agree with the original reviewer and believe the article does not meet the GA criteria. If this is the case, look to any improvements that the reviewers suggest, implement them, and renominate the article again at GAN.

Other tasks

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This is the equivalent of 0.1 megapixels, as described here. Non-free images with higher resolutions must explain why this is necessary.