a computer program like an AI Eliza program generates a test on the material at wikipedia then puts the test right at the article
This gives people an opportunity to practice n retain what they read
they could accumulate a proof of the articles visited then share that with teachers
autogenerated quizzes make Wikipedia superior to Britanicca at least until Britanicca creates the same feature
Note: rewrite of a previous item
Youtube version at link-- beanangel, Dec 04 2007 Youtube version http://www.youtube....watch?v=neHOXZ8Db-I [beanangel, Dec 04 2007, last modified Jun 03 2009] <eliza>Why do you think Youtube version at link?</eliza>-- phoenix, Dec 04 2007 It doesn't need to be automatic. Wikipedia has enough nerds to write the quizzes themselves, all they'd have to do is start a "Quiz Wikiproject" complete with banners that say "This is part of the Quiz Wikiproject" or "This page does not have a quiz. Why don't you create one?"
Anyway, bun for you.-- Spacecoyote, Dec 04 2007 they could also expand it to the halfbakery [+]-- keithbrunkala, Dec 04 2007 Why do you laugh in an evil way after washing your hands?-- hippo, Dec 04 2007 I'ld bun this except 1) writing AI code to *understand* text and then extract enough meaning from it to ask a meaningful question that couldn't just be answered by cut & paste is actually an interesting problem (on the Computer Science scale of trivial..interesting); and 2) I'm not bunning anyone who mis-spells Britannica twice in one article. And by twice I mean in two different ways, so it's not as if you didn't realise that you didn't know how to spell the word.-- gtoal, Dec 04 2007 Treon, I am pretty sure one of you has posted this before.-- 4whom, Dec 04 2007 Wikipedia is not a valid source of factual information, Britanica is.-- Antegrity, Dec 05 2007 A good idea if you have to pass the quiz -- i.e., you have to have read the existing entry -- before modifying it.-- Ford, Dec 06 2007 random, halfbakery