From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Assessment at WikiProject American Old West is conducted on two separate levels. First the article is assessed for its "class." Stub, start, B, C, GA, or FA? Class helps keep track of where we are and where we should go. The second criterion an article is assessed on is its importance to the project. A table below helps explain. First, the article subject's historical value is assessed. Mid-level importance articles have some significance, but not as much as top level articles. Top level importance articles are articles that are important to include in an encyclopedia. The lowest assessment is for little-known, interesting pieces of trivia relating to the American Old West.

Assessment instructions

An article's assessment is generated from the class parameter in the {{ WikiProject American Old West}} project banner on its talk page (see the project banner instructions for more details on the exact syntax):

{{WikiProject American Old West|class=??? }}

The following values may be used:

should only be used for articles that are currently listed as featured articles
should only be used for articles that are currently listed as good articles

Non-article pages can be rated, though for the list and category class it's better to use our templates because it adds them to the appropriate category in Category:WikiProject American Old West articles, which helps immensely with overall organization.

The following values may be used:

should be used on disambiguation pages related to WikiProject American Old West
should be used on image pages related to or in articles related to WikiProject American Old West
should be used on redirect pages related to articles in WikiProject American Old West
should be used on WikiProject American Old West template pages, such as an infobox or navigation box.

Articles for which a valid class is not provided are listed in Category:Unassessed American Old West articles. The class should be assigned according to the quality scale below.

Quality scale

Importance assessment

An article's assessment is generated from the importance parameter in the {{ WikiProject American Old West}} project banner on its talk page (see the project banner instructions for more details on the exact syntax):

{{WikiProject American Old West|class=???|importance=??? }}

The following values may be used:

should only be used for top-importance articles.
should only be used for high-importance articles.
should only be used for mid-importance articles.
should only be used for low-importance articles.
  • NA (for use on non-articles).

Importance scale

Articles for which a valid importance is not provided are listed in Category:Unknown-importance American Old West articles. The importance should be assigned according to the importance scale below.

Top Subject is a must-have for a print encyclopaedia Famous historical figure or event from the American Old West.
High Subject contributes a depth of knowledge Well-known historical figure or event from the American Old West.
Mid Subject fills in more minor details Significant historical figure or event from the American Old West.
Low Subject is mainly of specialist interest Not well-known; an interesting piece of trivia relating to the American Old West.
NA Non-Article Project pages
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Assessment at WikiProject American Old West is conducted on two separate levels. First the article is assessed for its "class." Stub, start, B, C, GA, or FA? Class helps keep track of where we are and where we should go. The second criterion an article is assessed on is its importance to the project. A table below helps explain. First, the article subject's historical value is assessed. Mid-level importance articles have some significance, but not as much as top level articles. Top level importance articles are articles that are important to include in an encyclopedia. The lowest assessment is for little-known, interesting pieces of trivia relating to the American Old West.

Assessment instructions

An article's assessment is generated from the class parameter in the {{ WikiProject American Old West}} project banner on its talk page (see the project banner instructions for more details on the exact syntax):

{{WikiProject American Old West|class=??? }}

The following values may be used:

should only be used for articles that are currently listed as featured articles
should only be used for articles that are currently listed as good articles

Non-article pages can be rated, though for the list and category class it's better to use our templates because it adds them to the appropriate category in Category:WikiProject American Old West articles, which helps immensely with overall organization.

The following values may be used:

should be used on disambiguation pages related to WikiProject American Old West
should be used on image pages related to or in articles related to WikiProject American Old West
should be used on redirect pages related to articles in WikiProject American Old West
should be used on WikiProject American Old West template pages, such as an infobox or navigation box.

Articles for which a valid class is not provided are listed in Category:Unassessed American Old West articles. The class should be assigned according to the quality scale below.

Quality scale

Importance assessment

An article's assessment is generated from the importance parameter in the {{ WikiProject American Old West}} project banner on its talk page (see the project banner instructions for more details on the exact syntax):

{{WikiProject American Old West|class=???|importance=??? }}

The following values may be used:

should only be used for top-importance articles.
should only be used for high-importance articles.
should only be used for mid-importance articles.
should only be used for low-importance articles.
  • NA (for use on non-articles).

Importance scale

Articles for which a valid importance is not provided are listed in Category:Unknown-importance American Old West articles. The importance should be assigned according to the importance scale below.

Top Subject is a must-have for a print encyclopaedia Famous historical figure or event from the American Old West.
High Subject contributes a depth of knowledge Well-known historical figure or event from the American Old West.
Mid Subject fills in more minor details Significant historical figure or event from the American Old West.
Low Subject is mainly of specialist interest Not well-known; an interesting piece of trivia relating to the American Old West.
NA Non-Article Project pages

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