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A data-based pedagogy of rhetoric for lower-division technical writingHenson, Darold Leigh. Renner, Stanley W. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (D.A.)--Illinois State University, 1982. / Title from title page screen, viewed April 6, 2005. Dissertation Committee: Stan Renner (chair), Glenn Grever, John Heissler, Jan Neuleib, Ross Rutter, Dent Rhodes, Ronald Halinski. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 156-159) and abstract. Also available in print.
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RTFM N00b : criticizing internet based instructional documents as a rhetorical genreCarlson, Gordon S. III 02 December 2005 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis is to aid in qualitative
improvements to technical support documents on the
Internet. By using a generic criticism this analysis
will make substantive suggestions towards the
improvement of this type of document by engaging the
rhetoric employed by their authors. It will discuss the
history of technical documentation, hypermedia, and the
Internet. Using a generic criticism, the analysis will
explore the strengths and weaknesses of representative
documents in order to define a rhetorical genre. With a
genre defined, the analysis will offer suggestions to
the authors of instructional documents on the Internet
regarding ways to improve the qualitative features of
the documents. The analysis will conclude with
suggestions for further research. / Graduation date: 2006 / Best scan available for Appendix. Original has a photocopy of black and white screen shots.
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Toward understanding writing to learn in physics investigating student writing /Demaree, Dedra Nicole, January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2006. / Title from first page of PDF file. Includes bibliographical references (p. 286-294).
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Multimodal analysis of academic posters by student writers across disciplinesLi, Yanan, 李亚男 January 2014 (has links)
This dissertation examines the multimodal discourse of academic posters from three disciplines, namely, Chemistry, Speech & Hearing Sciences and Linguistics, in an attempt to unravel how writers from different disciplinary communities build their communicative purposes into the verbal and visual modes in their posters. The analytical framework adopted for this study builds upon the one proposed by D’Angelo(2010), which incorporates Hyland’s metadiscourse model (2005) and Kress and van Leeuwen’s visual grammar paradigm (2006) for the verbal and visual analyses respectively, and supplements it with multimodal content analysis adapted from Jones’s (2007) model. Follow-up interviews with members of the discourse communities were also conducted to enhance the validity of the results. The findings reveal that there exist a wide range of differences in the use of metadiscourse markers (e.g. hedges, boosters, evidentials, code glosses) across the three group texts pertaining to disciplinary influences. There is also evidence that academics in different subjects value some of the same qualities in the texts necessitated either by the peculiar context of poster presentations (e.g. frame markers, engagement markers) or a need to maintain scientific formality (e.g. self-mentions). Visually, the concern for the context and ‘scientificness’ continue to exert great influences, rendering a myriad of visual manifestations (e.g. framing, modality) that are commonly shared across the data, whereas the cross-discipline discrepancy mainly narrows down to the image usage(functions and types). / published_or_final_version / Applied English Studies / Master / Master of Arts in Applied Linguistics
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Engagement with text : collaborative writing in a high technology companyBegoray, Deborah Leslie 11 1900 (has links)
Over the past decade, an interest in collaboration has
been coming to the fore in composition studies. Whereas once
we were primarily interested in investigating the cognitive
processes of the individual, we now seek to understand more
about the social dynamics of writing in groups to improve our
teaching of composition in the classroom. To that end, this
dissertation looks at the real world collaborative activities
of business proposal writers within a high technology company.
Writing in the workplace is often undertaken in groups, and my
work at Cerebellum, Inc. with computer professionals (who
wrote as part of their jobs) reveals complexities hitherto
unsuspected in the social writing process.
The importance of a detailed understanding of
collaboration has been called for in the literature by, for
example, Ede and Lunsford (1990). My dissertation surveys
current literature in composition, including a review of
investigations into collaboration during business writing as a
salient behaviour of such a discourse community. In order to
accomplish my research, I used a video camera to record the
activities which embodied the writing process at Cerebellum
Inc. I found that the use of the video camera in an
ethnographic manner not only helped me to gather detailed
data, both verbal and nonverbal, in the continuous and
comprehensive detail so vital to communication research, but
also assisted in initiating better understanding within the
business community of the aims and approaches of academic
research. Video technology gave me a chance to participate in
as well as observe situations, and also opened the door to
conversation concerning my methods and my findings with both
researchers and informants.
I propose a model of the varying levels of engagement
undertaken by the writers of a business proposal. I then
suggest the educational value of the representation with a
discussion of implications for the teaching of writing in the
workplace and in more traditional school settings.
Detailed research into collaboration offers us a window
on the social processes which constitute writing for our
students now and in their futures in the workplace. Such work
is vitally important to ensuring superior levels of advanced
literacy which will be in continuing demand now and in the
next century.
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Organization and management of a technical writing companyBoyd, Montague Laffitte 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Case studies of technical report writing development among student engineersSloat, Elizabeth A. January 1994 (has links)
This research examines factors that either promote or hinder workplace writing among Chemical Engineering students during their study in two Technical Report writing courses. It examines the extent to which a workplace writing environment, which instructors believe they create, is actually enacted in the classroom, and also explores the differences in intended and actual learning outcomes between instructors and students. / A number of qualitative research methods were used to gather data for sixteen student case studies. These methods include taped and transcribed interviews with students and the two course instructors, an analysis of all student reports and course documentation, classroom observations, taped student-professor conferences, and taped responses from both instructors as they evaluated each student report. / Research findings suggest that students learned the required technical report format since everyone passed the course. Findings further suggest, however, that explicit efforts to enact a professional chemical engineering writing environment within this university context were generally unsuccessful. Writing tasks did not reflect an authentic workplace writing situation where writers believed their composing purpose was to communicate with others within their community of Chemical Engineering. Even though attempts were made by instructors to create such an environment, the writing task actually became a school-based exercise where students learned to provide the right textual format in order to meet with both teacher expectations and writing success. / The study concludes that educators must be aware of their real teaching and learning agendas and that these objectives must be conveyed adequately to students. Findings also reinforce the difficulty of enacting authentic workplace writing contexts within academic environments, and ways to achieve this goal are discussed. This research also contributes to evolving theoretical discussions about writing and the teaching of writing.
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Teach workplace writing with authentic asssessment [sic] in introductory technical writing classroomsYu, Han, Savage, Gerald J. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Illinois State University, 2007. / Title from title page screen, viewed on April 8, 2008. Dissertation Committee: Gerald Savage (chair), Ronald Fortune, Ronald Strickland. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 180-189) and abstract. Also available in print.
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Displays of knowledge text production and media reproduction in scientific practice /Wickman, Chad. January 2009 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Kent State University, 2009. / Title from OhioLINK ETD abstract webpage (viewed March 12, 2010). Advisor: Christina Haas. Keywords: Scientific writing; rhetoric of science; writing in the disciplines; multimodality; semiotics; visual rhetoric; technical writing; ethnography; workplace literacy. Includes bibliographical references.
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Teaching students to revise and proofread an experiment with technical writing students /Pavlisin, Peggy Irene. Heissler, John M. January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (D.A.)--Illinois State University, 1982. / Title from title page screen, viewed April 11, 2005. Dissertation Committee: John Heissler (chair), Glenn Grever, Elizabeth McMahan, William Piland, Charles Sherman. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 131-135) and abstract. Also available in print.
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