Technical Communication Quarterly

1119 articles
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April 2007

  1. REVIEWS: Digital Nation: Toward an Inclusive Information Society by Anthony G. Wilhelm
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1602_6
  2. Visual Communication and the Map: How Maps as Visual Objects Convey Meaning in Specific Contexts
    Abstract

    Abstract This article reports the results of a case study of two maps, produced by the National Marine Fisheries Service and the Natural Resources Defense Council, and their involvement in a federal court case over the deployment of the Navy's low-frequency active sonar. Borrowing from Kress and van Leeuwen's (1996) Kress, G. and van Leeuwen, T. 1996. Reading images: The grammar of visual design, New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar] approach to visual analysis, Turnbull's (1989) Turnbull, D. 1989. Maps are territories, science is an atlas: A portfolio of exhibits, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. [Google Scholar] understanding of the map, and Latour's (1990) Latour, B. 1990. “Drawing things together.”. In Representation in scientific practice, Edited by: Lynch, M. and Woolgar, S. 19–68. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. [Google Scholar] understanding of how visuals work in social contexts, the article offers an analytical approach to studying maps as powerful visual, rhetorical objects.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336561
  3. Visual Communication and the Map: How Maps as Visual Objects Convey Meaning in Specific Contexts
    Abstract

    Abstract This article reports the results of a case study of two maps, produced by the National Marine Fisheries Service and the Natural Resources Defense Council, and their involvement in a federal court case over the deployment of the Navy's low-frequency active sonar. Borrowing from Kress and van Leeuwen's (1996) Kress, G. and van Leeuwen, T. 1996. Reading images: The grammar of visual design, New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar] approach to visual analysis, Turnbull's (1989) Turnbull, D. 1989. Maps are territories, science is an atlas: A portfolio of exhibits, Chicago: University of Chicago Press. [Google Scholar] understanding of the map, and Latour's (1990) Latour, B. 1990. “Drawing things together.”. In Representation in scientific practice, Edited by: Lynch, M. and Woolgar, S. 19–68. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press. [Google Scholar] understanding of how visuals work in social contexts, the article offers an analytical approach to studying maps as powerful visual, rhetorical objects.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1602_4
  4. REVIEWS
    doi:10.1080/10572250709336562
  5. REVIEWS: What Writing Does and How It Does It: An Introduction to Analyzing Texts and Textual Practices, edited by Charles Bazerman and Paul Prior
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1602_5
  6. Exploring Authority: A Case Study of a Composition and a Professional Writing Classroom
    Abstract

    Abstract Abstract This article reports on classroom research designed to answer questions about authority—how institutions and disciplines, broadly conceived, influence teachers' ability to abnegate authority and how students' experiences influence their perceptions of authority in a business writing and a first-year composition class. The theoretical framework is derived from research about institutional and disciplinary influences on these two areas of study. This framework and our results lead us to speculate about the ways in which our students' experience of the institution and expectations of the classes and their intentions for using the material taught in the classes may have thwarted our attempt to share authority in our classrooms. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We gratefully acknowledge the help of our undergraduate and graduate associates, MO and JB. They not only attended every one of our classes but also conducted our interviews. This particular study would not have been possible without them. Additional informationNotes on contributorsJean LutzJean Lutz, also an associate professor of English, directs two technical communication programs at Miami University. She is coeditor of The Practice of Technical and Scientific Communication. She has published in collections and journals, including College English and Research in the Teaching of English.Mary FullerMary Fuller, associate professor of English and Director of the Ohio Writing Project, has coauthored Literature: Options for Reading and Writing and published essays in collections and journals, including National Middle School Journal, Writing Program Administrator, and National Writing Project Quarterly.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1602_3
  7. Global Partnerships: Positioning Technical Communication Programs in the Context of Globalization
    Abstract

    Globalization is radically transforming technical communication (TC) both in the workplace and in higher education. This article examines these changes and the ways in which TC programs position themselves amid globalization, in particular the ways in which they use emerging global partnerships to prepare students for global work and citizenship. For this purpose, the authors report on a Council for Programs in Technical and Scientific Communication-supported exploratory study of current partnership initiatives in TC programs. The study indicated a high level of activity, planning, and interest in global partnerships and revealed a range of creative and innovative partnerships that systematically integrate new opportunities for experiential learning, collaborative international research, and civic engagement in a global context into programs and their curricula. Partnerships also emphasize cultural sensitivity, equal partner contribution, and mutual benefit, thus offering alternatives to emerging global trade visions of higher education. The article also identifies key challenges that partnerships face, suggesting implications for programs and the field as a whole to facilitate successful partnerships.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1602_1
  8. Global Partnerships: Positioning Technical Communication Programs in the Context of Globalization
    Abstract

    Globalization is radically transforming technical communication (TC) both in the workplace and in higher education. This article examines these changes and the ways in which TC programs position themselves amid globalization, in particular the ways in which they use emerging global partnerships to prepare students for global work and citizenship. For this purpose, the authors report on a Council for Programs in Technical and Scientific Communication-supported exploratory study of current partnership initiatives in TC programs. The study indicated a high level of activity, planning, and interest in global partnerships and revealed a range of creative and innovative partnerships that systematically integrate new opportunities for experiential learning, collaborative international research, and civic engagement in a global context into programs and their curricula. Partnerships also emphasize cultural sensitivity, equal partner contribution, and mutual benefit, thus offering alternatives to emerging global trade visions of higher education. The article also identifies key challenges that partnerships face, suggesting implications for programs and the field as a whole to facilitate successful partnerships.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336558
  9. Exploring Authority: A Case Study of a Composition and a Professional Writing Classroom
    Abstract

    Abstract This article reports on classroom research designed to answer questions about authority—how institutions and disciplines, broadly conceived, influence teachers' ability to abnegate authority and how students' experiences influence their perceptions of authority in a business writing and a first-year composition class. The theoretical framework is derived from research about institutional and disciplinary influences on these two areas of study. This framework and our results lead us to speculate about the ways in which our students' experience of the institution and expectations of the classes and their intentions for using the material taught in the classes may have thwarted our attempt to share authority in our classrooms.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336560

January 2007

  1. Online Education in an Age of Globalization: Foundational Perspectives and Practices for Technical Communication Instructors and Trainers
    Abstract

    Online access and interest in technical communication are increasing on a global scale. The time is therefore right for instructors to consider offering online courses to students located around the globe. Providing effective online courses for such a diverse audience, however, is no simple matter. This article provides an overview of the global market in online education. It presents information and approaches that can help with the development of online courses for international delivery as well as the training and professional development of the instructors, U.S.-based or otherwise, who teach them.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1601_2
  2. Exploring Electronic Landscapes: Technical Communication, Online Learning, and Instructor Preparedness
    Abstract

    Instead of focusing on technologies of online delivery, specific course design, or reporting on the successes or lessons learned of an online or distance education course, in this essay I focus on the readiness of technical communication teachers for teaching in online settings. Using ideas gleaned from cultural geography, specifically the concept of reading and interpreting landscapes, I develop a framework for instructors to determine their willingness, readiness, and preparedness to teach online. The final section of this essay provides an example of using this framework based on my explorations into my readiness to teach online. I find that self-selection for online instruction is a critical step in developing powerful instructional settings and allows technical communication teachers to cross or remove existing boundaries within their own pedagogical practices.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336576
  3. CALL FOR PROPOSALS
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1601_8
  4. Integrating Critical Approaches to Technology and Service-Learning Projects
    Abstract

    Discussions of service learning emphasize opportunities for students to gain real world experience through work in community contexts. Less attention, however, has been given to the role of technology in these projects. Incorporating critical reflection on the rhetorical and social dimensions of technology throughout students' collaborations with clients can help to situate their practices within larger public contexts. This sort of reflection can encourage student engagement on a variety of levels: professional, rhetorical, intellectual, personal, and civic.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1601_6
  5. Immersion in a Digital Pool: Training Prospective Online Instructors in Online Environments
    Abstract

    This article argues that the online environment is optimal for teaching prospective instructors how to develop and implement online courses. To support this claim, the author draws on hypertext theories to define the online course archive as a constructive hypertext and to describe the work the course archive is able to do when used to instruct prospective online instructors. The claim is further supported through a quantitative and qualitative analysis of a course archive.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336577
  6. Exploring Electronic Landscapes: Technical Communication, Online Learning, and Instructor Preparedness
    Abstract

    Instead of focusing on technologies of online delivery, specific course design, or reporting on the successes or lessons learned of an online or distance education course, in this essay I focus on the readiness of technical communication teachers for teaching in online settings. Using ideas gleaned from cultural geography, specifically the concept of reading and interpreting landscapes, I develop a framework for instructors to determine their willingness, readiness, and preparedness to teach online. The final section of this essay provides an example of using this framework based on my explorations into my readiness to teach online. I find that self-selection for online instruction is a critical step in developing powerful instructional settings and allows technical communication teachers to cross or remove existing boundaries within their own pedagogical practices.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1601_3
  7. Integrating Critical Approaches to Technology and Service-Learning Projects
    Abstract

    Discussions of service learning emphasize opportunities for students to gain real world experience through work in community contexts. Less attention, however, has been given to the role of technology in these projects. Incorporating critical reflection on the rhetorical and social dimensions of technology throughout students' collaborations with clients can help to situate their practices within larger public contexts. This sort of reflection can encourage student engagement on a variety of levels: professional, rhetorical, intellectual, personal, and civic.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336579
  8. REVIEWS
    doi:10.1080/10572250709336580
  9. Guest Editors' Introduction: Online Teaching and Learning: Preparation, Development, and Organizational Communication
    Abstract

    Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Additional informationNotes on contributorsBeth L. HewettBeth Hewett is Coeditor of the online journal Kairos: Rhetoric, Technology, Pedagogy and a consultant with the NCTE Professional Development Consultant Network. She recently coedited Technology and English Studies: Innovative Professional Paths with James A. Inman. Her current research includes online writing instruction, instant messaging, and the rhetoric of the eulogy.Christa Ehmann PowersChrista Ehmann Powers is Vice President of Education for Smarthinking, Inc., an online learning company. She recently coauthored Preparing Educators for Online Writing Instruction: Principles and Processes with Beth L. Hewett. Christa's current research focuses on online teaching and learning, empirical research methods for online settings, and distance management strategies.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1601_1
  10. REVIEWS
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1601_7
  11. Online Education in an Age of Globalization: Foundational Perspectives and Practices for Technical Communication Instructors and Trainers
    Abstract

    Online access and interest in technical communication are increasing on a global scale. The time is therefore right for instructors to consider offering online courses to students located around the globe. Providing effective online courses for such a diverse audience, however, is no simple matter. This article provides an overview of the global market in online education. It presents information and approaches that can help with the development of online courses for international delivery as well as the training and professional development of the instructors, U.S.-based or otherwise, who teach them.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336575
  12. Immersion in a Digital Pool: Training Prospective Online Instructors in Online Environments
    Abstract

    This article argues that the online environment is optimal for teaching prospective instructors how to develop and implement online courses. To support this claim, the author draws on hypertext theories to define the online course archive as a constructive hypertext and to describe the work the course archive is able to do when used to instruct prospective online instructors. The claim is further supported through a quantitative and qualitative analysis of a course archive.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1601_4
  13. Special Issue ofTechnical Communication Quarterly:Science and Public Policy
    doi:10.1080/10572250709336581
  14. Guest Editors' Introduction: Online Teaching and Learning: Preparation, Development, and Organizational Communication
    Abstract

    Click to increase image sizeClick to decrease image size Additional informationNotes on contributorsBeth L. HewettBeth Hewett is Coeditor of the online journal Kairos: Rhetoric, Technology, Pedagogy and a consultant with the NCTE Professional Development Consultant Network. She recently coedited Technology and English Studies: Innovative Professional Paths with James A. Inman. Her current research includes online writing instruction, instant messaging, and the rhetoric of the eulogy.Christa Ehmann PowersChrista Ehmann Powers is Vice President of Education for Smarthinking, Inc., an online learning company. She recently coauthored Preparing Educators for Online Writing Instruction: Principles and Processes with Beth L. Hewett. Christa's current research focuses on online teaching and learning, empirical research methods for online settings, and distance management strategies.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336574
  15. A Rhetorical Approach to Single-Sourcing Via Intertextuality
    Abstract

    A recent technique called single-sourcing has evolved to handle complex documents that involve content replication. Current rhetorical theories are insufficient to analyze this technique. This essay offers a background rooted in the poetic movements of Anglo-American Imagism and Russian Acmeism. Through developing an intertextuality of induction, rhetorical structure, and emphasis on craft, the poetic traditions inform examples of how these concepts apply to pedagogical and paradigmatic approaches to single-sourcing.

    doi:10.1080/10572250709336578
  16. A Rhetorical Approach to Single-Sourcing Via Intertextuality
    Abstract

    A recent technique called single-sourcing has evolved to handle complex documents that involve content replication. Current rhetorical theories are insufficient to analyze this technique. This essay offers a background rooted in the poetic movements of Anglo-American Imagism and Russian Acmeism. Through developing an intertextuality of induction, rhetorical structure, and emphasis on craft, the poetic traditions inform examples of how these concepts apply to pedagogical and paradigmatic approaches to single-sourcing.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1601_5

October 2006

  1. Using Writing to Structure Agency: An Examination of Engineers' Practice
    Abstract

    A longitudinal study of four engineers shows that moving into positions of authority and responsibility allows them to claim agency within the structure of the organization. However, that structure is less stable than it first appears, and they use writing to try to establish it in a way that will allow them to achieve their goals. Agency seems to consist of the conjunction of discursively established positions in the organization and participants' taking organizational intents as their own.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1504_1
  2. The Triumph of Users: Achieving Cultural Usability Goals With User Localization
    Abstract

    Current localization practices suffer from a narrow and static vision of culture resulting in usability problems for IT product and design. To address this problem, this article compares user localization efforts of mobile messaging technology in two different cultural contexts with a new methodology of cultural usability. It calls for expanding the scope of localization practices and linking user localization efforts to the IT product design cycle.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1504_3
  3. Contact and Interactivity: Social Constructionist Pedagogy in a Video-Based, Management Writing Course
    Abstract

    In this study of a management writing course delivered via interactive television (ITV) and video streaming (VS), we examine the impact of video-based media on the instructor's pedagogy. Using grounded theory as a methodological lens, we arrive at two core categories, contact and interactivity, and four subcategories, presence, control, dialogue, and liveliness. After a careful analysis of these categories, we claim that video-based delivery deserves attention because it represents a promising component of distance learning writing instruction. Video allows an instructor to reintroduce talking as a means of learning into the arena of distance education, which tends to be dominated by text-heavy, Web-based methods of delivery. In fact, the emergence of liveliness as a category suggests that, for distant students, active learning occurs during spontaneous discussions made possible by video components. Video-based media that complement text-based interactivity can support social constructionist pedagogy in distance learning.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1504_2
  4. REVIEW
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1504_5
  5. An Interview With Bonnie A. Nardi
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1504_4

June 2006

  1. A Hybrid Analytical Framework to Guide Studies of Innovative IT Adoption by Work Groups
    Abstract

    This article presents a framework for analyzing innovative information technology adoption by organizational work groups. Concepts from three distinct theories (adoption and diffusion theory, cultural-historical activity theory, and the social construction of technology) are modified and integrated to form a hybrid, layered framework, which is then applied to a specific case to demonstrate the advantages for guiding research and analysis. The illustrative case presents the experience of a small work group in a high-technology company that implemented single-source content management.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1503_5
  2. Social Determinants of Preparing a Cyber-Infrastructure Innovation for Diffusion
    Abstract

    This study presents a case of asynchronous, collaborative problem solving aimed at readying a sophisticated distributed technology for large-scale diffusion. We analyzed e-mail transcripts of 30 technologists negotiating complex technical improvements necessary for wide-scale diffusion and found that the group's social interactions and discursive practices determined the improvements they were willing to realize. We detail these social dynamics and their effects on readying technologies for diffusion and argue that technology teams need to become more aware of diffusion as a social dynamic.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1503_4
  3. Guest Editor's Introduction: Communication in Technology Transfer and Diffusion: Defining the Field
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1503_1
  4. Light Writing: Technology Transfer and Photography to 1845
    Abstract

    This article reviews the history of photography to 1845 in France, England, and the United States, emphasizing roles of collaboration, legal protection, and training in the development and transfer of the technologies of the heliograph, physautotype, daguerreotype, and calotype. It argues that early innovative work in photography was motivated by plural desires: to photo-illustrate printed publications, to capture scenes from nature, to render human portraiture, and to investigate scientific theories of radiation.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1503_2
  5. Technology Transfer and Patents: Implications for the Production of Scientific Knowledge
    Abstract

    This article explores articulations between scientific publication and the patent system: (a) Previously patented work may function as inputs to lab activity, (b) patents may result from lab activity, (c) patents may delay scientific publication, and (d) issued patents may enhance a researcher's credibility. As patentable subject matter expands and as universities engage actively in technology transfer, researchers in cutting-edge subjects can no longer depend on pursuing inquiries in ignorance of the patent system.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1503_3
  6. REVIEW
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1503_7
  7. Intercultural Rhetoric, Technology Transfer, and Writing in U.S.–Mexico Border Maquilas
    Abstract

    This article explores the transfer of U.S. technologies to three maquilas, or joint U.S.–Mexican manufacturing facilities in northern Mexico. Drawing on case study methods, it focuses on the rhetorical strategies that Mexican engineers and manufacturing personnel used to translate U.S. technologies and corresponding documentation for their Mexican contexts. It also suggests ways U.S. technical communicators can adapt their documentation to be more effective for these U.S.–Mexican intercultural rhetorical contexts.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1503_6

April 2006

  1. Assessment in Client-Based Technical Writing Classes: Evolution of Teacher and Client Standards
    Abstract

    Client-based technical writing classes have the potential to help students practice a smooth transition between school and work because they allow the side-by-side examination and negotiation of standards of writing for faculty and technical clients. However, this potential is often not realized. This article reports the results of two case studies using interviews and surveys to examine the evolution of the standards of clients and faculty throughout one semester as well as student perceptions of those standards. The results suggest that three factors help students understand standards in a way that is conducive to effective school-to-work transition: standards negotiation, teacher awareness of client standards, and perceived overlap in teacher–client standards at the end of the semester.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1502_1
  2. Journals Monitored
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1502_8
  3. Teaching Intercultural Communication in a Technical Writing Service Course: Real Instructors' Practices and Suggestions for Textbook Selection
    Abstract

    (2006). Teaching Intercultural Communication in a Technical Writing Service Course: Real Instructors' Practices and Suggestions for Textbook Selection. Technical Communication Quarterly: Vol. 15, No. 2, pp. 191-214.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1502_4
  4. Popularizing Nanoscience: The Public Rhetoric of Nanotechnology, 1986–1999
    Abstract

    This study examines the representations of nanoscale science and technology in written popular media from 1986 to 1999. Nanoscale science is an emergent field that examines the principles of matter at a molecular level. This article presents the representations through which nanoscale science and technology was initially introduced to the public. Written popular media influences the ways stakeholder groups perceive, support, and fund science and technology. From 1986 to 1999 this field was introduced to the general public through articles in newspapers, magazines, and other general interest publications. During this period, nanoscale science and technology had a fragmented public image as proponents of various representations of the field competed for legitimacy. The study demonstrates that the emergence of nanoscience and technology in the popular media occurred as a competitive and transitional social–rhetorical process in which the new emerged within existing and established understandings of science but was mediated by biographical and other social accounts of the research.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1502_2
  5. PEDAGOGICAL APPROACHES: Using Charettes to Perform Civic Engagement in Technical Communication Classrooms and Workplaces
    Abstract

    Charettes offer a productive way of combining theory and practice to address some of the difficult matters of getting students to see and perform technical communication as students, professionals, servers, and citizens. This collaborative activity helps students prepare for an increasingly modular professional world by revealing the contingent rhetoricity of professional autonomy. Charettes can help technical writing programs and students integrate service and civic learning into the curriculum by using indigenous professional genres that actively demand stakeholder participation. The intensity and pragmatic force of charettes can assist students in building their ethos while working with fellow stakeholders. The wide range of possible documents involved in the process associated with charettes can help technical communication students and teachers explore the connections between rhetorical exigencies and genre and put their skills to good use in a culture where many are looking for new ways to build critical citizenship.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1502_5
  6. REVIEWS
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1502_6
  7. 2004 ATTW Bibliography
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1502_7
  8. Prediscursive Technical Communication in the Early American Iron Industry
    Abstract

    Examing the discourse surrounding the charcoal iron industry between 1760 and 1860 in North America, this article suggests that, prior to the industrialization of work, technical communication took place in a prediscursive setting, an oral and physical world that we can just manage to glimpse even as we watch it recede. The letters of Robert Erskine written in 1770 illustrate the prediscursive methods of technical communication. By the 1860s, a flood of governmental, professional, and commercial publications appeared, each signifying the disappearance of this prediscursive world. This transition from prediscursive to discursive methods may mark one of the largest changes in the history of technical communication.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1502_3

January 2006

  1. REVIEW
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1501_8
  2. Guest Editors' Introduction: Making the Cultural Turn
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1501_2
  3. Cars, Culture, and Tactical Technical Communication
    Abstract

    Abstract This article examines two cases of technical documentation occurring outside of institutions. Using a framework derived from de Certeau's (1984) distinction between strategies and tactics and Johnson's (1998) concept of the user-as-producer, I analyze communities surrounding Muir's (1969) How to Keep Your Volkswagen Alive! A Manual of Step by Step Procedures for the Compleat Idiot and Champion's (2000) Build Your Own Sports Car for as Little as £250. These communities engage in tactical technical communication, especially in the form of technological narratives that participate in broader cultural narratives about technology.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1501_6
  4. Disability Studies, Cultural Analysis, and the Critical Practice of Technical Communication Pedagogy
    Abstract

    This article critically analyzes how technical communication practices both construct and are constructed by normalizing discourses, which can marginalize the experiences, knowledges, and material needs of people with disabilities. In particular, the article explores how disability studies theories can offer critical insights into research in two areas: safety communication and usability. In conclusion, the article offers ways that disability studies can intervene in the pedagogy of usability, communication technology, linguistic bias, narrative, and discourse communities.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1501_5
  5. CALL FOR PAPERS
    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1501_9