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8.05.09
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WikiComp

Purpose
Throughout
the semester the instructor has provided you with readings that cover
the issues of composition studies. As you become immersed in these discussions,
you will want to pursue other perspectives or focus on specific issues.
The WikiComp
assignment gives you the opportunity to collaborate with your peers to
expand your collective knowledge of the field. First you will define a
composition concept for you and your peers. Then you will contribute to
other's defintions. Throughout the semester, you will want to use these
sources to both enrich your contribution to class discussions and to support
the documents that you draft for this class.

Concept
Entry
Instructions–Invention
In an
email to the
instructor, you will request and be assigned a composition
concept. After you learn what your concept is, you will want to do some
research to learn how this concept has been defined and currently discussed
by the field of writing studies. To do this research you will want to
review any credible source. You will be required to support your entry
with at least three secondary sources about composition (i.e., academic
articles); these sources can come from the textbooks. Additionally,
consult the resource
page for a list of composition journals; additonally consult
various edited collections.
Concept |
Student |
Audience |
Candace |
Current-Traditional
Rhetoric |
|
Expressivism
|
Mel |
Cognitivism |
Ariel |
Process |
Emily |
Post-Process |
|
Social
Contructivism |
Rachel |
Rhetoric |
Judah-Micah |
Literacy |
Kacie |
Genre |
Victor |
Modes |
Travis |
Voice |
Gavin |
Grammar |
Julie |
Revision |
Valarie |
Peer
Review |
Michael |
Collaborative
Writing |
Tony |
Assessment |
Patrick |
Service-Learning |
Joi |
Plagiarism |
Mathieu |
Computers
and writing |
Kristen |
Instructions–Writing
Go
to WikiComp
on WetPaint and compose a 750 word entry about your assigned composition
concept. In this entry, you will...
- define
the concept; this defintion should have some historical perspective
to explain how the concept has or has not changed
- discuss
how current writing studies scholars (2000 and later) discuss the
application of this concept
- begin
a reference list for the concept by including a bibliography for the
sources you reference; choose APA or MLA
Revisions
Instructions–Invention
For each
revision, you will want to find one academic, refereed article or chapter
about a subject related to concept. Thus you will find a total of five
articles for the revision part of this assignment. These
texts
- should
be based upon issues that you are interested in learning more about
- should
be based upon pedagogical ideas that you want to both support and
refute
- do
not have to be related to your assigned concept for the initial entry
submission
- do
not have to be confined to the concepts listed above; if the article
that you have read does not fit into these concepts, consult
the instructor.
- cannot
be text assigned for the class
- cannot
be texts your peers have already discussed on WikiComp
- can
only once come from the unread articles in the textbook
Refereed
scholarship has been judged worthy of publication by other experts in
fields related to their respective fields. Consult the resource
page for a list of rhetoric journals; additonally consult
various edited collections.
Other
texts that qualify include...
- academic
journal articles, including online journals
- chapters
from an edited collection
- chapters
from an academic book (no more than two chapters per book)
Texts
that do not qualify include...
- most
popular publications, such as certain magazines and web pages (consult
instructor)
- newsletters
- book
reviews
- academics'
websites
These
list, of course, are not exhaustive. If you have any questions whether
an article or chapter qualifies, consult the instructor. Entries for
texts that do not qualify will not get credit.
Variations
from these parameters are acceptable, but consult the instructor first.
Instructions-Writing
For each
revision, you will want to...
- Choose
the appropriate concept that the scholarship you read corresponds
with. In some instances, your choice will be an argument that you
will have to make
- Using
the scholarship you read as the foundation for your 200-300 word revision,
add text to the initial entry. For this revision, you should...
- read
over the existing entry
- appropriately
revise, edit, or (re)format the existing text
- try
to incorporate your addition into the existing text, rather than
just tack it on
- explain
the argument presented in the scholarship you read
- breifly
explain how the author arrives at this argument; highlight the
most important details
- add
to the reference list with a citation for the text; use the citation
format that the author of the initial entry used

Criteria–Concept
Entry
Logistics:
- 750
w0rds
-
single-spaced
- This
document is due on September
28, 2009 posted
on WetPaint
-
50 points
In addition
to the general evaluation
criteria, the instructor will be looking for evidence of...
- a sense
of audiencedo you present the material in a way that your audience
can use it as a resource for their projects? are you reasonably thorough?
do you make the information accessible?
- an informed
understanding of rhetoric. Does your entry engage the much larger conversation
about the concept? Do you demonstrate a nuanced understanding of the
concept?
- appropriate
use of conventions, including MLA or APA citation formatting
Criteria–Revisions
Logistic:
In addition
to the general evaluation
criteria, the instructor will be looking for evidence of...
- a sense
of audiencedo you provide enough information and detail about
the article that your audience of peers gets a clear sense of the article's
content? Likewise do you only highlight important information? Do you
write the revision to make it useful to your peers?
- a sense
of collaboration–do you engage the work of the previous writers?
do you appropriately revise, edit, or (re)format the entry?
- an informed
understanding and discussion of writing studies, as well as other topics
the text covers
- appropriate
use of conventions, including MLA or APA citation format based upon
precedent

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