Technical Writing Definition Goals Writing Process What is
- Slides: 47
Technical Writing Definition Goals Writing Process
What is Technical Writing? l Technical writing introduces you to some of the most important aspects of writing in the world of science, technology, and business – the kind of writing that scientists, nurses, doctors, computer specialists, government officials, engineers, and other people do as a part of their regular work.
What is Technical Writing? l The term “technical” refers to knowledge that is not widespread, that is more the territory of experts and specialists. l Whatever your major is, you are developing an expertise, and whenever you try to write anything about your field, you are engaged in technical writing.
What is Technical Writing? l l Technical communication can be written, oral, or visual. Technical writing is composed in and for the workplace. Technical writing is a significant factor in work experience for a variety of reasons. Technical writing serves valuable purposes in the workplace and often involves teamwork.
IMPORTANCE OF Technical Writing l l l l Completion of a task Facility of Work Improvement of Interpersonal Relationships Increase of Income Means of Job promotion Improvement of Personality traits Security of Records
Qualities of a Technical Writer • • • Superior Communication Skills HOTS or Higher-Order Thinking Skills Persuasive Skills Integrity Zest • Tech. Writing in this Era of Globalization and Modern Tech. by Baraceros
What is the purpose of technical writing? l Technical writing is the delivery of technical information to readers in a manner that is adapted to their needs, level of understanding, and background. l Technical writing is intended to communicate to a specific audience, for a specific purpose.
The Audience l The audience element is so important that it is one of the cornerstones of technical writing. l You are challenged to write about highly technical subjects but in a way that a beginner —a non-specialist—could understand.
Translating Technical Information l In a world of rapid technological development, people are constantly falling behind and becoming technological illiterates. l As a technical writer, you need to write about the area of specialization you know and plan to write about in such a way that even Granddad can understand.
Q&A l What are the five qualities of and effective Technical Writer? • • • Superior Communication Skills HOTS or Higher-Order Thinking Skills Persuasive Skills Integrity Zest
l In the Importance of Tw, this depends on emotional stability, interpersonal relationships and ethical standards; * Improvement of Personality traits
l Transactions, dealings, agreements have to be recorded or documented for safekeeping purposes or for knowledge transmission. TW prevents a possible loss or change of data *Security of Records
l l This element in TW is so important that it is one of the cornerstones of technical writing. You are challenged to write about highly technical subjects but in a way that a beginner—a nonspecialist—could understand. *The Audience
l Fill in the blanks l Technical writing introduces you to some of the most important aspects of writing in the world of________, and _____– the kind of writing that_____, _______, __________officials, engineers, and other people do as a part of their regular work. *science, technology, and business scientists, nurses, doctors, computer specialists, government officials
l What does HOTS stand for? l *Higher-Order Thinking Skills
*Goals of Effective Technical Writing l Clarity l Conciseness l Accuracy l Organization l Ethics
Effective Technical Writing: Clarity Methods for developing ideas precisely – An expressive essay can clarify the writer’s intent through emotional, impressionistic, connotative words (soon, many, several, etc. ). – An impressionistic word such as “near” will mean different things to different people which is okay in an essay where the goal may to convey a feeling. in be
Effective Technical Writing: Clarity l The ultimate goal of effective technical writing is to say the same thing to every reader. l Let’s say I write instructional manuals for company manufacturing space heaters. If I write, “Place the space heater near an open window, ” what will this mean to thousands of customers who purchase the machine?
Effective Technical Writing: Clarity l l l One person may place the heater 6 feet from the window. Another reader will place the heater 6 inches from the window. As the writer, I have failed to communicate clearly.
Effective Technical Writing: Clarity l Specify – Provide specific detail – Avoid vague words (some, recently) – Answer reporters’ questions (who, what, where, when, why, how)
Effective Technical Writing: Clarity l Avoid obscure words – – Use easily understood words Write to express, not to impress Write to communicate, not to confuse Write the way you speak aforementioned in lieu of already discussed instead of
Effective Technical Writing: Clarity l Limit and/or define your use of abbreviations , acronyms, and jargon. Ø Define your terms parenthetically Ø CIA (Cash in Advance) or Ø Supply a separate glossary Ø Alphabetized definitions list of terms, followed by their
Effective Technical Writing: Clarity l Use the active versus the passive voice. Ø Passive voice: It was decided all employees will take a ten percent cut in pay. Unclear: Who decided? Ø Active: The Board of Directors decided that all employees. . . Ø Overtime is favored by hourly workers. Wordy Ø Active: Hourly workers favor overtime. Ø
Effective Technical Writing: Conciseness l Conciseness which means expressing oneself in the fewest number of words at the same time retaining completeness in meaning.
Effective Technical Writing: Conciseness l Limit paragraph, word, and sentence length. – – A paragraph in a memo, letter, or short report should consist of l No more than four to six typed lines or l No more than fifty words. Fog index (sixth to eighth grade level) l Strive for an average of 15 words per sentence l No more than 5 multisyllabic words per 100 words
Effective Technical Writing: Conciseness Fog Index l Count up to 100 words in successive sentences – Divide words by number of sentences = average number of words per sentence l Count number of long words (three or more syllables) within sentences – Don’t count proper names (Christopher Columbus), long words created by combining shorter words (chairperson), or three syllable words created by ed or es endings (united).
Effective Technical Writing: Conciseness – Use the meat cleaver theory of revision l Cut – – the sentence in half or thirds Avoid shun words– replace them with active words l Avoid words ending in –tion or –sion l Came to the conclusion concluded Avoid camouflaged words l Make an amendment to amend
Effective Technical Writing: Conciseness l Avoid the expletive pattern – – l There is, are, was, were, will be It is, was There are three people who will work for Acme. Three people will work for Acme. Omit redundancies – – During the year of 1996 During 1996
Effective Technical Writing: Conciseness l Avoid wordy phrases – In order to purchase l Proofread for accuracy l Consider ethics to purchase
Effective Technical Writing: Accuracy l The importance of correct grammar and mechanics – Grammatical or mechanical errors make writers look unprofessional and incompetent.
Effective Technical Writing: Accuracy l Grammar is so important in technical writing that in a one page assignment – – l 4 major grammatical errors = F 3 major grammatical errors = D 2 major grammatical errors = C 1 major grammatical error = B “A” means “excellent” which is defined as “without flaw”
Effective Technical Writing: Organization l Methods for organizing – Spatial – General to Specific – Chronological – Mechanism Description – Process Description – Classification
Effective Technical Writing: Organization l Methods for organizing – Definition – Comparison/Contrast – More Important to Less Important – Situation-Problem-Solution. Evaluation – Cause-Effect
Effective Technical Writing: Ethics l Ethics – methods encouraging moral standards in technical writing – Practical – Legal – Moral
Effective Technical Writing: Ethics l General categories of ethics in communication – Behavior towards colleagues, subordinates and others (plagiarism, harassment, malicious actions) – Dealing with experimental subjects, interviewees, etc. (informed consent) – Telling the “truth” (falsify data, misrepresent facts) – Rhetoric—choosing your words (loaded words, discriminatory language, logical fallacies)
l In the goals of effective TW: – The ultimate goal of effective technical writing is to say the same thing to every reader. *CLARITY
l _______which means expressing oneself in the fewest number of words at the same time retaining completeness in meaning. l * CONCISENESS
l The importance of correct grammar and mechanics *ACCURACY
Effective Technical Writing: Process l The writing process is effective. . . and easy. l All that you need to do is three things: – Prewrite (about 25 percent of your time) – Write/Draft – Rewrite/Post-write (about 25 percent of your time) (about 50 percent of your time)
Effective Technical Writing: Prewriting Techniques l Brainstorming sessions l Free writing of looping l Interview l Questionnaire survey l Reading l Listing l Speculating l Semantic Mapping or Drawing
DRAFTING or WRITING l The stage of packaging or formatting data – Data packaging– means spending time and effort in forming clear and correct sentences to express the ideas you have collected through a pre-writing strategy or data-collecting technique - It involves the use of appropriate transitional devices and paragraph organizational techniques that are suitable to your purpose and are effective for paragraph unity, coherence and emphasis.
– – Formatting Data – makes you think of how your report should appear This means giving your written work a design, layout, or arrangement of its words, sentences, and paragraphs, illustrations, colors and so forth.
POST-WRITING l A. Revising – making changes in the context and organization of the text so that it will reflect your specific purpose, fit your intended audience, and apply the essential qualities of a paragraph like unity, coherence, emphasis and correctness
l B. Editing – means to check the grammaticalness of the text – l The use of the different parts of speech, to diction or choice of words, to construction of sentences, and to your punctuation marks and spelling. C. Proofreading – focusing attention to typographical errors, report format, documentation style as well as missing parts or words in the written work.
Technical Writing l l l Is important to success in business Lets you conduct business Takes time Costs the company Reflects your interpersonal communication skills Often involves teamwork
Sources l Society for Technical Communication l Technical Writing - A Dalton: Organizing l Online Technical Writing: Information Infrastructures – Comparison l Online Technical Writing
- Strategic goals tactical goals operational goals
- Strategic goals tactical goals operational goals
- Importance of technical communication
- General goals and specific goals
- Motivation in consumer behaviour
- Academic writing and technical writing difference
- Technical definition examples
- The control process begins with establishing standards
- Technical communication process and product
- Writing functional goals
- Technical writing quiz 1
- Vocabulary of technical writing
- What are the characteristics of technical writing
- Example of technical writing
- Abcs of technical writing
- Minimalism in technical writing
- Style in technical writing
- Recency objectivity relevance conciseness
- Technical writing lesson plans
- Technical writer portfolio
- Sdlc technical writing
- Abstract in technical writing
- Do's and don'ts of technical writing
- Clarity in technical writing example
- Abstract in technical writing
- Technical report elements
- Technical writing style
- How to write email to company
- Report writing notes
- Abc format technical writing
- Objectivity in technical writing
- Essentials of technical communication
- Inquiry letter technical writing
- Conciseness examples in 7cs
- Idiomatic diction
- Scope of technical writing
- Example of definition
- Example of technical writing poem
- Research methods and technical writing
- Clarity courtesy spacing correctness
- Writing technical papers
- Technical writing mistakes
- Importance of technical writing
- Technical writing conclusion
- Technical writing resume
- Importance of technical writing
- Purpose of technical writing
- Fog index in technical writing