Preservapedia:Who writes Preservapedia

{| width="100%" style="border: solid 2px #A3B1BF; background: #F5FAFF" | Who writes Preservapedia

Volunteers do not need any formal training before creating a new article or editing an existing article. The people who create and edit articles in Preservapedia have a wide range of backgrounds and expertise. The diversity of editors' experience is what makes Preservapedia great.

Users of Preservapedia may consult the page history of an article in order to assess the number, and the perspective, of people who contributed to the article. You can also consult the talk page of any article to see what other readers and editors have to say about it.

How to improve articles
When you find an article that is incomplete or inaccurate, you can edit the article to help make Preservapedia more accurate and useful. Someone may place a notice at the top of the article indicating that it needs to be cleaned up. It is also possible to create a new article to share information that is not yet in Preservapedia.

The best way to decide whether a particular statement is accurate is to find independent, reliable sources to affirm that statement, such as books, journal articles, trade publications or web sites. For more guidance on evaluating the accuracy of Preservapedia articles, see Preservapedia:Researching with Preservapedia. It is Preservapedia's policy to add to the encyclopedia only statements that are verifiable, including original research that is accompanied by references or other forms of documentation. The Preservapedia style guide encourages editors to cite sources. Detailed citations allow readers of the article to easily verify the content in question.