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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Lhakthong (talk | contribs) at 18:56, 5 September 2021 (→‎Notable Members: new section). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

WikiProject iconFraternities and Sororities B‑class High‑importance
WikiProject iconPhi Kappa Phi is part of the Fraternities and Sororities WikiProject, an effort to build a comprehensive and detailed guide to Greek Life on the Wikipedia. This includes but is not limited to International social societies, local organizations, honor societies, and their members. If you would like to participate, you can edit the article attached to this page, visit the project page, where you can join the project, and/or contribute to the discussion.
BThis article has been rated as B-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale.
HighThis article has been rated as High-importance on the project's importance scale.

Should this article be rated B-class?

See here for criteria and example pages. --Lhakthong (talk) 06:10, 26 March 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Came across this article with a current C-rating. I vote to keep the rating as is (C-class), because the article sounds like it is more of a marketing -- rather than information or educational -- tool for readers, punctuated as it is with much verbosity and several "claims" here and there. In addition, there is this long debate in this Talk Page about the questionable reputation of Phi Kappa Phi.Sheldon Lowe (talk) 13:04, 7 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Sheldon Lowe, how does it compare to other Honor society pages in terms of amount of information and neutrality? I've done most of the recent work on this page, and I used as many third party sources as possible. Is it just that certain parts are too long and contain superfluous material? Is it too verbose in a section? Which parts? You are more the welcome to try and edit the language for brevity so long as information isn't deleted (unless discussed first). Are there any specific suggestions you have for making the article better? Also, the debate on the talk page was not about the reputability of Phi Kappa Phi, it was about the appropriateness of making any claim to prestige on Wikipedia. It doesn't take long to find that Phi Kappa Phi is reputable: College Confidential --Lhakthong (talk) 19:07, 7 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
also, "Among the prestigious national honor societies with campus chapters at Illinois are Tau Beta Pi (Engineering), Beta Gamma Sigma (Business), Kappa Delta Pi (Education), Phi Beta Kappa (LAS), Phi Kappa Phi (campus-wide), and the freshman honor societies Alpha Lambda Delta, Gamma Sigma Delta (ACES), and Phi Eta Sigma." See Illinois Honors —Preceding unsigned comment added by Lhakthong (talkcontribs) 19:12, 7 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
I would not rely on that College Confidential --Lhakthong (talk)because they are simply a mix of blogs and emails of unknown sources. I would only go for reliable third-party sources.
I really do not have the time to edit or discuss, and would not wish to add more to the lengthy discussions here about Phi Kappa Phi's repuation. But here are my suggestions to improve the article.
1st Paragraph: Delete quotes on "democracy and education" (whatever that means), the motto (the mission will suffice), and the phrase "established to recognize and encourage superior scholarship without restriction as to area of study" (you already said it is an all-discipline society plus all honor societies obviously promote "superior scholarship" plus you repeated it again under Membership). Those three sound like pure and simple advertising.
Membership: Delete claims. I would be more concerned if a society with only 300 chapters elects 30,000 annually. It sounds like anyone could just join or be invited.
Initiation Fees: Why would anyone discuss in Wikipedia how much it will cost to go to dinner with one or more guests? Besides, fees change. Delete this paragraph entirely as it is totally irrelevant to an encyclopedia.
History: This is too long and detailed. Cut out the details. Also, the opening sentence about only two honor societies in existence in 1800s is totally incorrect (see ACHS website -- the accrediting agency for honor societies). Phi Beta Kappa predated all honor societies. Although it started as a social/literary organization, it was purely an honor society by the 1830s when it gave up its secrecy (due to the anti-Masonic movement) and chose to elect members based purely on grades and character. What it did not do until 1898 was to choose a field (arts and sciences). All other honor societies, including Tau Beta Pi (see its history book) were modeled after Phi Beta Kappa. I think this point has been repeatedly made in this page also.
Mission: Too detailed. Delete the quotes. Summarize the point/s in one or two sentences.
Publications: Again, the list of notable contributors like Reagan, etc. sounds like pure self-promotion and marketing. We all know that Reagan, etc. will never write a piece -- the ghostwriter he hired did it. So it just makes the reputation of Phi Kappa Phi all the more suspicious.
Chapter on Notable Campuses: This sounds like another cheap marketing ploy. I have never seen any honor society page list chapters on "notable campuses." Besides, branding terms like "public ivy" or "little ivy" are immature and unnecessary. It just makes it look like Phi Kappa Phi cannot go for the real ivies. I would just delete this whole paragraph and say that the society has 300 chapters. That's it.
In conclusion, make the article objective, reliable, concise, coherent and interesting. Details, quotes, branding labels, etc. not only are inappropriate but cast suspicion on the motive of the entire article. That makes it a C or D-class article.
Good luck. Sheldon Lowe (talk) 16:09, 8 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks for your thoughts. First, my pointing you to the University of Illinois Honors Program website that lists Phi Kappa Phi as one of the 7 out of 50 honor societies on campus that it considers "prestigious" and pointing to the College Confidential site of everyday people who think that Phi Kappa Phi is reputable was to give you a quick showing that Phi Kappa Phi there is really no question regarding Phi Kappa Phi's is reputability. As for the rest, I'm not entirely sure I agree with your reasoning regarding why it should stay C-class (there is no D-class, although there are "lower" classes). Regarding your specific points, there are a couple I agree with and will change them when I get a chance. The rest is up to you, if you want to see it. Basically, if you think a passage is incoherent, make it more coherent. If you think it is one-sided, add sources and statements that balance it, or at least say what specifically would make it more objective. If you think it is unreliable, say specifically what would make it more reliable (I'm not even sure what that would mean and how it differs from "objective"). If you think something is not interesting, that is irrelevant. There are a lot of things on Wikipedia I find uninteresting, but that doesn't mean I should delete them. The same goes to what you personally would rather want to know. You either have something to add to the page regarding content, or you want to delete it on the grounds Wikipedia editing guidelines. There's not much else. Furthermore, the very things you say cast suspicion on the article are entirely appropriate. Details and quotes are entirely appropriate to Wikipedia guidelines, however you might not think they are employed effectively, which is a different matter. I don't know what you mean by "branding labels", but the images on the site are to help the reader understand the explanation of the society symbols, which appropriate to Wikipedia guidelines. This page is currently under length limit for Wikipedia guidelines. If you do want to make changes to the article for brevity or greater coherence or general making-better, and do it without deleting content, you don't need approval, just make it better. No one else will do it for you. If you want to actually delete content, state on the talk page specifically what you want to delete and why, offer alternatives if appropriate, wait for objections from editors, and, if none, then delete it. If there are objections, the task is to reach some sort of consensus. If you want me to respond to all of your points specifically, I can. --Lhakthong (talk) 22:56, 8 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Please see here for B-class criteria. It would be helpful if you would couch your criticisms in these terms. This is given as an example of a B-class article, and this is given as an example of a C-class article. For more, see link at top of this section. --Lhakthong (talk) 02:24, 9 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
As noted above, what I enumerated were my suggested changes. I will leave it up to you or to others to accept or reject what I consider to be the most important points that make the present article definitely a C-class (or below C) article. As the criteria for C-class articles specifically point out, the current Phi Kappa Phi article "contains a lot of irrelevant material" (some of which I have listed in my suggested changes) and "the article should have some references to reliable sources" (also noted by me above, which means that the article should avoid referring only to Phi Kappa Phi sources which would be difficult to validate in terms of objectivity). I am sorry I do not have the time or the energy to edit and engage in prolonged discussion.Sheldon Lowe (talk) 04:34, 9 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]
Sheldon, thanks for clarifying. I understand the first point, although it would require more discussion (what is considered relevant or irrelevant). Your second point I completely agree with. However, as with many honor society pages, there are not a lot of third party sources to draw from. I used all I could find. Where information came directly from PKP, I wrote "PKP claims that", which I know you don't like stylistically, but it was intended to point out to the reader that the information is not coming from a third party source in order to best abide by objectivity given the circumstances. Thanks again for your suggestions and for taking the time to offer them. --Lhakthong (talk) 15:47, 9 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]


Editing of Lead

Per results of mediation, and the agreement of all parties concerned to retain the Lead paragraph as it was on 03/19/09 (after so many changes had been made and finally agreed upon), I therefore request Lhakthong to refrain from editing the lead (again) and to abide by what he wrote in the mediation page. Failure to conform to that mediation agreement will result in a report to the admin concerned and in my editing other sections of the article that I disagree with for any reason. Thanks.Angtitimo (talk) 05:09, 14 April 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Why, aside from the first clause of the sentence, is it necessary to state "It was founded in 1897, fourth after other similar academic societies: Phi Beta Kappa for the Liberal Arts and Sciences, Tau Beta Pi for Engineering, and Sigma Xi for Scientific Research, chronologically (See also "History", below)." in the lede? This seems to me to be a detailed point better suited for the history section. On another note, threatening to report and to edit other sections of the article in retaliation is not a constructive means to collaborative editing. I edited the lede for brevity. Content was not deleted but moved to the appropriate section in the article. Such edits are unquestionably within Wikipedia editing guidelines. I think we either need to keep it as brief as possible while hitting major facts, like the "GA" class page of Beta Upsilon Chi or we need to lengthen the lead to reflect the "FL/FA" class (featured class) pages of Alpha Kappa Alpha or Alpha Phi Alpha. Obviously from my previous edit of the lede, I prefer the former. You tell me which format you like better, and them maybe we can go from there. --Lhakthong (talk) 16:55, 4 May 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Description of Seal

There was an edit made attempting to correct/clarify some language in the description of the Seal. I agree with the anonymous edit claiming that Troy is not considered part of Ancient Greece. However, the language in that section, as vague as it might be on the distinction, is taken directly from Phi Kappa Phi chapter sites. The purpose of the section is to explain the symbolism of the society's seal. I'm not sure who has more authority to talk about the symbolism of a society's seal than the society itself; and regardless of whether the Society is correct in its understanding (if it is even making the claimed assertion), it is cited and verifiable as the symbolism stated by the Society. If anyone has any suggestions as to how to resolve this without WP:OR, please let us know.Lhakthong (talk) 16:43, 12 March 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Translation of the Motto

The translation is literally not exact, better: "The Love of Wisdom should be the Ruler of the Mortals".90.186.17.118 (talk) 23:39, 10 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]

Notable Members

The Notable Members list of this page has been changed quite a bit since it was edited in 2009. Specifically, the list that was taken directly from a society document has grown to include names of people that cannot be verified to be members of the Society. o, I am adding a "citations needed" tag to the Notable Members section. I will wait a bit before deleting names. The Society itself has a selected list of members here, and I hope to eventually add any missing names and cite the aforementioned source for those names. I'd like to also suggest the list not turn into a list of every single Phi Kappa Phi member person with a Wikipedia page, because then it becomes longer than the rest of the article itself, and that the Notable Members list can be a "selected" list of members referring, at least to begin with, those names on the Phi Kappa Phi site. [[[User:Lhakthong|Lhakthong]] (talk) 18:56, 5 September 2021 (UTC)][reply]