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((helpme)) I have the content ready to post except waiting a few hours for the last editor. Can the page stay for 24 hours without content added? --PSY7 (talk) 23:08, 3 August 2009 (UTC)
Redirect ended. Article recreated with content edits; References clarified, revised and verified.PSY7 (talk) 00:27, 22 August 2009 (UTC)
Much, if not all, of this article appears to be original research. Many of the sources do not use the term people skills to describe their content - for example the Leviticus quote and the APA study. The Types of Skills section is completely unreferenced, save for one source which is a merely the definition of psychosocial. The UNESCO source is referring to 'life skills' which, as described in the lead, is a different (albeit related) topic, covered in another article.
The previous incarnation of this article was deemed OR, blanked and redirected to Wiktionary, as the only salvageable content was a dictionary definition, which of course is unsuitable for Wikipedia. I fear this could happen again if the article is not improved further. DoktorMandrake 07:22, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
As a writer involved with this page, I am addressing the questions raised by AJCham/DoktorMandrake. People Skills is a relatively new term with wide usage (1,950,000 hits for a Google "people skills" search today). The range of usage varies in comprehensiveness, yet there is considerable overlap in core skills.
The first reference is now a description by the Business Journal News Service. According to these usages, Leviticus is quoted as examples of basic guidelines “relating to people skills” from early records of human history.
Psychosocial is defined in the Merriam-Webster dictionary as “involving both psychological and social aspects”. The APA study “Century of research confirms impact of psychosocial factors on health” includes people skills in the psychosocial factors in the full text version , namely, stress management on page 32 and interpersonal skills on page 33.
The Types of Skills section has been referenced with two major reputable resources. The three “Further reading” references are consistent with these types of skills.
The “UNESCO Research” British Telecommunications reference specifically notes “skills of speaking and listening” (people skills as reported in the above references) in their summary referring to life skills. PSY7 (talk) 03:07, 15 October 2009 (UTC)
As a professional editor with 7+ years of experience, I examined this article's references and found the citations are specifically verified by mainstream sources. Reader7777a (talk) 20:46, 25 October 2009 (UTC)
The first reference is now a description by the Business Journal News Service. According to these usages, Leviticus is quoted as examples of basic guidelines “relating to people skills” from early records of human history.
I would like to request an outside opinion on the content of this article, and how it relates to our policy on original research and synthesis, as noted in the discussion above.
I've not taken steps myself to improve this article, as frankly, I've been somewhat unsure of how best to improve it, or whether it is likely to remain or not. AJCham 21:36, 25 October 2009 (UTC)