Wikipedia:Supports
Appearance
This page has a list of supports, a list of ways in which people can support Wikipedia.
Editors
[edit]- Editors can support Wikipedia by proofreading their work before they submit it.
- Editors can support Wikipedia by being cautious if they use Microsoft Word's Spelling and Grammar Check.[1]
- Editors can support Wikipedia by contributing content.
- Editors can support Wikipedia by improving content.
- Editors can support Wikipedia by organizing content.
Donors
[edit]- Donors can support Wikipedia by donating money.
Teachers
[edit]- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching good study habits.[2]
- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching correct English (including correct spelling, correct grammar, and correct punctuation).[3]
- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching learners how to use foreign languages correctly.
- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching learners how to use the International Phonetic Alphabet.
- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching learners how to use a style guide.
- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching learners how to compose brief, informative headings.[4]
- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching learners how to compose brief, informative sentences.
- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching learners how to compose brief, informative paragraphs.
- Teachers can support Wikipedia by teaching learners how to evaluate Internet sources.[5]
Life skills leaders
[edit]- Life skills leaders (in religious spheres, in philosophical spheres, and in business spheres) can support Wikipedia by teaching ethical behavior.
Print and web page journalists
[edit]- Print and web page journalists can support Wikipedia by publishing information useful to Wikipedia.
- Print and web page journalists can support Wikipedia by being cautious if they use Microsoft Word's Spelling and Grammar Check.[1]
- Print and web page journalists can support Wikipedia by using correct English (including correct spelling, correct grammar, and correct punctuation).[3]
- Print and web page journalists can support Wikipedia by using foreign languages correctly.
- Print and web page journalists can support Wikipedia by using the International Phonetic Alphabet.
- Print and web page journalists can support Wikipedia by checking their reports for accuracy.[6]
- Print and web page journalists can support Wikipedia by using the International System of Units, that is, the metric system.
Broadcast journalists
[edit]- Broadcast journalists can support Wikipedia by publishing information useful to Wikipedia.
- Broadcast journalists can support Wikipedia by using correct English (including correct pronunciation, correct grammar, and correct pausing).[3]
- Broadcast journalists can support Wikipedia by using foreign languages correctly.
- Broadcast journalists can support Wikipedia by using the correct Unicode names of characters.
- Broadcast journalists can support Wikipedia by checking their reports for accuracy.[6]
- Broadcast journalists can support Wikipedia by using the International System of Units, that is, the metric system.
Webmasters
[edit]- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by publishing information useful to Wikipedia.
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by being cautious if they use Microsoft Word's Spelling and Grammar Check.[1]
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by using correct English (including correct spelling, correct grammar, and correct punctuation).[3]
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by using foreign languages correctly.
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by providing each visitor a positive user experience.
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by keeping information up to date.
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by managing link rot.
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by archiving their web pages on the Wayback Machine.
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by using the International System of Units, that is, the metric system.
- Webmasters can support Wikipedia by using ISO 639 language codes on multilingual websites.
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- Editors may be reluctant to link to web pages with too many errors in English or other languages.
- A comma on a page and a pause in speech can distinguish a non-restrictive clause.
- A hyphen joins two elements, but an em dash separates elements.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Microsoft Word Spelling and Grammar Check Demonstration
- ^ DMOZ—Reference: Education: How to Study
- ^ a b c d Common Errors in English Usage
- ^ Microcontent: How to Write Headlines, Page Titles, and Subject Lines
- ^ Evaluating Internet Research Sources
- ^ a b I Fooled Millions Into Thinking Chocolate Helps Weight Loss. Here's How.—io9 (May 27, 2015)