Wikipedia:Notability (schools)
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This page provides guidance to be used by Wikipedia editors to determine if a school should or should not have an article on Wikipedia. This guidance applies to articles about schools themselves; it is not directly applicable to school districts or other education articles. While satisfying these notability guidelines generally indicates that a school warrants an article, a school article failing to do so is not a criterion for speedy deletion.
This guideline can be considered a specialised version of Wikipedia:Notability applied to schools. It reflects the core values of Wikipedia policies, including the following:
- No original research
- Reliable sources
- Verifiability
- Wikipedia articles must not be vehicles for advertisement
- Wikipedia is not an indiscriminate collection of information
Claims of notability must adhere to Wikipedia's policy on Verifiability; it is not enough to simply assert that a school meets a criterion without substantiating that claim with reliable sources.
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[edit] Criteria
- A school is notable if it has been the subject of significant coverage[1] in secondary sources.
- Such sources must be reliable, and independent of the school itself. The depth of coverage of the subject by the source must be considered. If the depth of coverage is not substantial, then multiple independent sources should be cited to establish notability.
- Trivial or incidental coverage of a subject by secondary sources is not sufficient to establish notability.[2]
- Once notability is established, primary sources may be used to add content.
- Ultimately, and most importantly, all content must be verifiable by reliable sources. Thus, schools with sufficient sourced material have the necessary notability for an article.
[edit] Indicators of probable notability
The following criteria are some indicators of probable notability and indicate that suitable sources almost certainly exist for building the article. If any of the following can be reliably sourced, then the article should not be deleted but allowed to exist as a stub.
- The school has a notable award or status (e.g., Beacon school, Training school (UK)).
- The school receiving the highest available official assessment (e.g., Blue Ribbon Schools Program (US), or with a Grade 1 (outstanding) Office for Standards in Education overall assessment (UK)).
[edit] Failure to establish notability
- These guidelines assume that there is some encyclopedic content. Directory-only entries (name, address, school type, staff member listings, etc.) are not adequate.
- Subject to the above paragraph, if a school article fails to establish notability, but the school can be confirmed to exist, then the page should be merged and redirected. In the United States and Canada, schools are usually organized by school district. The article about the school district (if one exists), or the municipality (if not), is the normal target. Outside North America the target should be an Education in ... page if one exists or, failing that, the lowest level of locality article.
[edit] Notes
- ^ "Significant coverage" means that sources address the subject directly, and no original research is needed to extract the content. Significant coverage is more than trivial but may be less than exclusive.
- ^ For example, simple reporting of sporting or academic events occurring (a routine if not daily event for most schools) does not establish notability. However, a school winning a state (US/Australia), provincial (Canada) or county (UK) (or higher) level sporting or academic event does count towards establishing notability.