Below is a listing of the project's older Featured Articles and Good Articles. Although the articles went through various forms of reviews to receive their designated status, some issues may have been overlooked, criterion may have changed, and the articles could have degraded over time. In order to ensure the articles maintain their elevated status, periodic cleanup is necessary to weed out overlooked vandalism, fix dead links, cleanup prose, and perform other tasks. Each article should be reviewed to look over three elements:
Once each article undergoes reviews of each of the three above elements, a stable revision should be listed in the last column. This revision will be helpful for annual reviews of our articles and will help provide great examples for new editors looking to bring an article up to GA/FA. If you have an FA/GA listed below that you helped promote, it's best that you do not check off the sections (except for maybe adding alt text). This will allow for other editors to point out issues that you may not necessarily see.
As many of our older GA/FAs were passed when the criteria were not as strict, it may be more challenging and require more effort to add additional citations or perform cleanup. However, this cleanup is necessary to ensure that our project's best articles maintain their elevated status and provide excellent examples to lead to new GA/FAs. After we have established a stable revision for each article, annual reviews will be much easier to keep up with as we just need to compare all new additions to the prior year's stable revision.
The articles listed below are those that two or more editors are taking the time to further improve to ensure that it meets the designated criteria. Feel free to assist any of the films listed, as more editors working can help to expediate the process and expand the potential for improved writing and source gathering. Teamwork can be helpful in tackling some of these articles, especially those that have several issues.
(articles highlighted are currently under collaboration)
25.4% complete | ||
(articles highlighted are currently under collaboration)
23% complete | ||