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OverviewProvides the instructors of introductory technical communication courses with a set of resources for their classrooms. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Cynthia SelfePublisher: Baywood Publishing Company Inc Imprint: Baywood Publishing Company Inc Edition: illustrated edition Weight: 0.612kg ISBN: 9780895033741ISBN 10: 0895033747 Pages: 342 Publication Date: 15 September 2007 Audience: College/higher education , Undergraduate , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsSECTION 1: Focus on Rhetorical Understanding Chapter 1: Using Client-Based Writing to Teach Problem Solving Art Young and Summer Smith Taylor Outcome: Students will be able to understand the value of writing as a problem-solving activity and learn to solve problems using communication. Chapter 2: Technical Reports as Rhetorical Practice Jim Kalmbach Outcome: Students will conceptualize reports as collections of rhetorical practices and improvisational strategies. Given a specific report template or format, they will construct a document that respects that template while also respecting their material and their rhetorical purposes. Chapter 3: Using Multiple-Source Research to Create Persuasive Communication Jennifer Shepperd Outcome: Students will understand the value of conducting both primary, experientially-based research and secondary-source research as means for constructing rhetorically situated, persuasive communication. Chapter 4: Using Design Approaches to Help Students Develop Engaging and Effective Materials that Teach Scientific and Technical Concepts Anne Francis Wysocki Outcome: Students will understand how and why to use design approaches in the development of technical and scientific communications and will be able to use different modalities rhetorically in developing communications. Chapter 5: Copyright Law and Fair Use Pedagogy: Teaching and Learning Strategies for Technical Communication Courses Michael Moore Outcome: Students will be able to identify contemporary contexts and issues in copyright and fair use, and be able to articulate those contexts and issues for multiple professional audiences SECTION 2: Focus on Socio-Cultural Understanding Chapter 6: Preparing Students for Service-Learning Contexts with Case Studies, Scenarios, and Workplace Writer Studies Teresa Kynell Hunt and Gerald Savage Outcome: Students will learn to analyze the contexts of writing tasks within organizational settings. Chapter 7: Adapting Communication to Cultural and Organizational Change Pete Praetorius Outcome: Students will learn that communicating effectively in the context of rapidly changing workplaces requires both close attention to interpersonal communication and an understanding of organizational culture. Chapter 8: Technological Activism: Understanding and Shaping Environments for Technology-Rich Communication Richard J. Selfe Outcomes: Students will understand the technical, economic, institutional, social, and cultural factors that help shape computer-supported spaces in which they create, revise, design, and exchange texts. They will be able to use this knowledge to improve the spaces that they and others use for communicating. Chapter 9:Communities of Practice: The Shop Floor of Human Capital Tracy Bridgeford Outcome: Students will be able to communicate effectively within and among communities of practice, demonstrating understanding of how communities of practice work, how they establish expectations for belonging, and how they agree on rules for negotiating meaning. Chapter 10: Analyzing the Interactive Audience: Constructing a Communal Knowledge Base Ann Kitalong-Will Outcome: Students will understand how audiences communicate and interact with businesses and organizations within new digital contexts, and how they construct communal knowledge bases within such spaces that contribute to changes in organizational practices. SECTION 3: Focus on the Complexities of Practice Chapter 11: Understanding Usability ApproachesJohndan Johnson-Eilola and Stuart Selber Outcome: Students will develop a holistic understanding of usability, one that scaffolds common approaches according to their social complexities. Chapter 12: An Ethics Primer: Strategies for Ethical Decision Making Michael Martin Outcome: Students will acquire a basic vocabulary and methodology for making ethical decisions in their technical communication practices. Chapter 13: Select, Interpret, Produce: A Three-Part Model for Teaching Information Graphics Karla Kitalong Outcome: Students will critically and competently select, interpret, and produce information graphics for use in technical documents. Chapter 14: Listen Up! Oral Presentations in the Technical Communication Classroom Patricia Freitag Outcome: Students will be able to author and deliver effective oral presentations that make appropriate and rhetorically effective use of available means, media, and modalities. Chapter 15: Let's Talk: Preparing Students for Speaking and Listening in the Workplace Gary A. Bays Outcome: Students will be able to speak and listen in small, informal group settings and collaborate effectively when presenting material. Chapter 16: The Elements of Technical Editing: Relationships, Roles, and Revisions Danielle DeVoss Outcome: Students will produce better, more polished, more refined prose; understand the different levels of editing and approaches most appropriate for each of those levels; and be familiar with the editing approaches most appropriate for different types of writing and documents. Chapter 17: Exploding the Cultural Myth of Transparent Communication of InformationMarilyn Cooper Outcome: Students will understand that clear communication of information does not depend on finding language (and images) that will be transparent in meaning to their readers but rather depends on evoking the contexts in which documents are used and on working with readers to understand their needs.ReviewsAuthor InformationCynthia Selfe Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |