User:Ecpat838/Choose an Article

Article Selection
Please list articles that you're considering for your Wikipedia assignment below. Begin to critique these articles and find relevant sources.

Option 1

 * Article title
 * Social media in the 2020 United States presidential election.
 * Article Evaluation
 * This article has a C-class rating. Many of the citations on this article are from popular news sources. The article also does not include much newly-published information about the topic. Now that it has been a few years since the election, there is more research data available.
 * Sources
 * Social Media’s Impact on the 2020 Presidential Election: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly . (2020, November 3). Division of Research. https://research.umd.edu/articles/social-medias-impact-2020-presidential-election-good-bad-and-ugly | https://research.umd.edu/
 * Mitchell, T. (2021, September 30). Charting Congress on Social Media in the 2016 and 2020 Elections. Pew Research Center - U.S. Politics & Policy . https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/09/30/charting-congress-on-social-media-in-the-2016-and-2020-elections/
 * Social Media’s Impact on the 2020 Presidential Election: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly . (2020, November 3). Division of Research. https://research.umd.edu/articles/social-medias-impact-2020-presidential-election-good-bad-and-ugly | https://research.umd.edu/
 * Mitchell, T. (2021, September 30). Charting Congress on Social Media in the 2016 and 2020 Elections. Pew Research Center - U.S. Politics & Policy . https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/09/30/charting-congress-on-social-media-in-the-2016-and-2020-elections/
 * Mitchell, T. (2021, September 30). Charting Congress on Social Media in the 2016 and 2020 Elections. Pew Research Center - U.S. Politics & Policy . https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2021/09/30/charting-congress-on-social-media-in-the-2016-and-2020-elections/

Option 2

 * Article title
 * Propaganda
 * Article Evaluation
 * This article is rated C-class and is part of several WikiProjects. Sections of the article read more like personal/argumentative essays and could stand to become more neutral. The 'wartime' section of the article contains a banner calling for further citations. The 'politics' section is limited. The article also does not have a section discussing the use of propaganda in the 21st cetnury, which could be a good addition.
 * Sources
 * Pedro, J. (2011). The Propaganda Model in the Early 21st Century (Part I). International Journal of Communication, 5(0), Article 0.
 * Staal, J. (2019). Propaganda Art in the 21st Century. MIT Press.
 * Pedro, J. (2011). The Propaganda Model in the Early 21st Century (Part I). International Journal of Communication, 5(0), Article 0.
 * Staal, J. (2019). Propaganda Art in the 21st Century. MIT Press.
 * Staal, J. (2019). Propaganda Art in the 21st Century. MIT Press.

Scriver, S. (2015). War Propaganda. International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-08-097086-8.96046-X

Option 3

 * Article title
 * Political criticism
 * Article Evaluation
 * This is a stub article with only one sentence in it. It does not contain any citations. It appers from the talk page that the article used to contain controversial or irrelevant content that was deleted.
 * Sources
 * Shapiro, I. (1990). Political Criticism. University of California Press.
 * Mohanty, S. P. (1989). Us and Them: On the Philosophical Bases of Political Criticism. The Yale Journal of Criticism, 2(2), 1–31.
 * Shapiro, I. (1990). Political Criticism. University of California Press.
 * Mohanty, S. P. (1989). Us and Them: On the Philosophical Bases of Political Criticism. The Yale Journal of Criticism, 2(2), 1–31.
 * Mohanty, S. P. (1989). Us and Them: On the Philosophical Bases of Political Criticism. The Yale Journal of Criticism, 2(2), 1–31.

Option 4

 * Article title
 * Article Evaluation
 * Sources
 * Sources
 * Sources

Option 5

 * Article title
 * Article Evaluation
 * Sources
 * Sources
 * Sources