Rhetoric and Composition

Welcome to the Rhetoric and Composition Wiki Book. This wikitext is designed for use as a textbook in first-year college composition programs. We are writing this free wikitext because we believe that while commercial textbook publishers offer excellent products, many of our students are unable to afford them. We would also like to make our knowledge available to anyone with the desire and ambition to learn rather than those few privileged enough to attend a university. Finally, we hope that readers like you will not only benefit from our work, but also contribute to its ongoing development. —Rhetoric and Composition (Wikibooks)

A wiki is a collection of user-editable web document. If you think you can explain something better, you can change it.

Several of my freshmen seemed surprised when they learned that Wikipedia — the most famous of all wikis — is user-editable, and that anyone in the world can work on it. Wikipedia has a devoted community of amateur fact-checkers, so that any deliberate vandalism is quickly spotted and reversed. I tell my students that Wikipedia is an acceptable resource for an informal in-class oral presentation, or if they want to consult it to inform their written responses to assigned readings.

For cutting-edge topics that involve online culture, or that require the sorting out of huge amounts of information (such as ongoing coverage of natural disasters), Wikipedia is an excellent source. If the article has been edited recently, and has been edited numerous times, its probably a fairly good representation of the common understanding of a topic. From time to time I find inaccuracies and omissions, but I try to fix them.

3 thoughts on “Rhetoric and Composition

  1. I, myself, have edited two wikipages, one on a professional wrestler, and the other on what a romance novel is. I have used a wikipedia page for a paper–only because it had one good quote.

    Is Wikipedia really that bad? Sure, it’s not a person with a Ph.D writing–but technically it’s a peer reviewed paper that is constantly changing.

  2. Mike, I actually might refer students to a Wiki composition textook, in part because I know (through the internet and conferences) some of the people working on this particular one, and because I’d be able to have a hand in shaping any parts of it that I felt weren’t what I would use. In fact, I’ve already made a minor edit and posted a suggestion.

    But I wouldn’t feel entirely comfortable recommending a Wikipedia page on a subject that I don’t know that much about.

  3. Yes, but what are thoughts about a wiki’d composition text? If you wouldn’t let your students use a wiki for a formal paper, would you really deign to let a wiki substitute for a course textbook?
    Wiki says that these are books that “anyone can edit” but who really does?

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