 We can have a look at today's featured article to see how a page is put together. You obviously have the title at the top. And at the first sentence or two, we establish why the article is worthy of inclusion on Wikipedia. So Wikipedia has a policy of notability. On Wikipedia has to establish why it's worthy of inclusion, why it's remarkable or significant. And we do that in the first two sentences. A good example is if you want to know more, you can check Wikipedia's guide on notability. And here we have a range of options there. But there are some good example pages. It's always a good idea to check pages that are similar to the one you want to work on to see how they establish notability. So here we have Cleopatra as a good example with full name dates of birth and death. And why that person is notable. Notable roles, context of where and when. And within that first sentence too, I think we've established why Cleopatra is notable. So let's go back to the featured article. So this is the featured article for today and today is the 28th of May. Let's see what else we've got here. We have broken it all down into paragraphs. We have clickable links to help the reader to advance their knowledge. We have a info box with an image. An image always helps. I believe it's about 50% more likely that an article will get clicked upon if it has an image within it. So we have an image there and just a little summary information. We have a content section over here. We have languages over here. So it exists in Spanish and Swedish Wikipedia's. And it's important to note that it's not a like for like translation. It can be, but all it means is that the article for the Phantom Toll Booth exists in a different language Wikipedia. So if we go down, we can split the article into sections, plot first of all an image over here. More clickable links and another section writing and we see some citations. Ideally we'd like a citation at the end of every line. That's the standard we're looking to work towards. So we go down a little quote in a box there. More pictures, further down themes, another quote, we're now on citation 25. So we're getting quite a lot of citations now. So as I say, we want to make sure we're backing up everything we say within the article with reference to good quality citations. Further down, publication reception, another quote. So history, editions and adaptations. We have an indented quote here. We're now on to citation 54. And now we can see the references and there's quite a lot here. And that's really what we want to see from a featured article. That there is been a wealth of research done to back up everything within it. And the good thing about Wikipedia's new visual editor interface is that citations and references that would have taken a long time to add to an article are now much easier and much more consistent to do. So if we go further down, we can see some final sections. Other works cited, selected editions and external links. And really we want to keep the external links to a minimum. I would say no more than three to five. But we also have a link to a wiki quote section. And that's a good thing about Wikipedia is we can link through to other projects like wiki source, the free content library, like wiki commons and like wiki data with extra information to help the reader of the article. Final thing to note at the bottom of the page is categories. Every article should have a number of categories that the article will fit within to help the reader find it and other similar articles. And if you're not sure what categories to use, just look up a similar article or you can also do a category search. If we all go back to the top, we can type in category colon and try and see if there is a category for 20th century novels, for instance. Yeah, there is that. And we could double check is what's already in these categories. And we could decide if we wanted our article to fit in that category, if it should fit into that category. Now, another thing to note is if we click on to view history, this shows us all the work that's gone into making this article, all the little changes that have been done. So we have a number of users have been involved, some logged in users, some anonymous edits. We have the size of the edits and the dates and the times of those edits. And we have a little description each time of what the edit is that we've done. And that's really what we should aim for. Just any time we make an edit describing that what change occurred during that edit doesn't need to be very long, but it helps us identify where each change has been made. And if we want to revert it back, if it's not a change in any way, improve the article. So there's lots of edits all the way down as you would expect for a featured article. There are also a number of additional statistics tools that we can click through at this point, if we're interested in finding out, for example, the number of views that we're getting. So we can go all the way back to August 2015 if we want to. But this is going from 27th of May all the way back to 8th of May at the moment. And we can see there's been a few views on the 17th. Quite a drop on the 21st, rising steadily back up on the 27th. So go back and back again. We have a look at the talk page. Every page on Wikipedia has an article page and behind it a talk page. And what we say is that Wikipedia is an academic encyclopedia, but it has an element of social media to it. And to get the best out of Wikipedia, you need to engage with both sides. The article on the top, the academic encyclopedia, and the talk article, the social media aspect. So if we go into talk, we see a bit of description about the article. It's telling us it's a featured article, identified as one of the best articles. And there's an open review process that explains how that featured article status was achieved. And we could click into that if we wanted, but we'll not do so for just now. We also see that this article has been placed within a wiki project, wiki project novels. And a lot of articles within Wikipedia are placed within wiki projects to allow editors that are interested in those projects to patrol those articles and to improve those articles. So go down, you see there's a content section for the talk section. And really anytime you're placing a new discussion area on the talk page, you would create a new heading. Here we have one for code. And you just write politely and respectfully a message asking for help. And someone should come back to you with a reply within a day or two. We need to understand that people are volunteer editors, so we need to allow a little bit of time for someone to come back to us. And we always sign our name to make sure that people know who it is. Is that it is leaving the message. Got a section on plagiarism there. Someone leaving a note, someone comes back to them and so on. It's a good place to discuss the article's creation. It's nice to involve yourself in the community aspect of Wikipedia. And other editors will respect that. But if you don't get a reply within a day or two, go into the Wiki project. This might be more regularly patrolled. And you can go to the talk page within that Wiki project and you can leave your message there in the same way. And I got invitation to our event. So you can leave a message there at the bottom of the page. Really appreciate if someone wants to add a picture of the cover and expand this article, et cetera. If no one comes back to you, I would say just edit the article. And the rule is be bold, but not reckless. So don't be afraid to edit, but be responsible with your editing. Last thing to do is something I'll need to do. Via logging in, so I'm going to log in. Last thing I want you to show you is the star here. If I click that, that tells me that this page has been added to my watch list. And so any edits made to this page, I will be notified about. So it will send me an email to tell me there has been an edit to Wikipedia Wiki project novels, and I can click on a link in the email that will take me through to view that change. So I'm not wanting to get notified about Wiki project novels at this moment in time. So I'm going to untick that star and it's been removed from my watch list. So I've removed a little bookmark there. But if it was an article I was interested in, say, for example, let's go back to the Phantom Tor booth. Perhaps I've made an edit. Perhaps I created the page. I might want to be notified of any changes to that page. And that little blue star allows you to do just that. And that's all I really wanted to show you about how to structure an article page. It's always good if you're creating an article just to check out similar articles to keep yourself right and featured articles are, as I said, the gold standard to which we all aspire. So there we have it. In the next video, I'll explain how to get going. Great. Thanks. Bye.