Technical Communication Quarterly

7 articles
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writing across the curriculum ×

March 2009

  1. Music, Transtextuality, and the World Wide Web
    Abstract

    This article sketches the significance of aurality in hypermedia, notes that the field of English studies is constructing the World Wide Web as a verbal and visual medium, and proposes a transtextual framework to aid technical communicators in designing musical hypermedia. Because the study of music on the World Wide Web is nascent, this article includes references to art and film music, whose theories and practices are substantially developed.

    doi:10.1080/10572250802708337

August 2007

  1. <i>Technical Communication and the World Wide Web</i>. Edited by Carol Lipson and Michael Day. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum, 2005. 355 pp
    doi:10.1080/10572250701372862

January 2005

  1. Decorative Color as a Rhetorical Enhancement on the World Wide Web
    Abstract

    Professional communication scholars have defined the decorative narrowly and subordinated it to informational text. Yet, current psychological research indicates that decorative elements elicit emotion-laden reactions that may precede cognitive awareness and influence interpretation of images. We conceive the decorative in design, and specifically color, as a complex rhetorical phenomenon. Applying decorative and color theory and analyzing design examples illustrating aesthetic, ethical, and logical appeals, we present a range of potential uses for color in electronic media.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1401_4

April 2003

  1. Review of The New Careers: lndiwidual Action and Economic Change
    Abstract

    (2003). Review of The New Careers: lndiwidual Action and Economic Change. Technical Communication Quarterly: Vol. 12, No. 2, pp. 230-234.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1202_7

October 2002

  1. Review of Writing Centers and Writing Across the Curriculum Programs: Building Interdisciplinary Partnerships
    Abstract

    (2002). Review of Writing Centers and Writing Across the Curriculum Programs: Building Interdisciplinary Partnerships. Technical Communication Quarterly: Vol. 11, No. 4, pp. 476-478.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq1104_7

January 1999

  1. Worlds within which we teach: Issues for designing World Wide Web course material
    Abstract

    Abstract Initially, online courses were created by pioneers—self‐taught Web site writers comfortable with uncertainty. As Internet‐based instruction has become increasingly popular, others are less inclined to struggle with writing their own Web pages but are nonetheless interested in having an instructional Web site. A growing number of course‐construction programs are becoming available which could make Internet‐based instruction more accessible. Only by addressing both pedagogical and technical issues can evaluation of such course creation products provide information useful for thoughtful and appropriate use of that technology to support and extend traditional pedagogies. This article concludes that creating online instructional sites by hand with the help of an HTML editor is generally preferable to using course‐in‐a‐box software because instructors can select the components needed to support their pedagogy and construct successful learning experiences for their students. On the other hand, the dilemma of faculty intimidated by the technical expertise needed to produce even a basic Web site can be ameliorated by the use of course‐in‐a‐box software. However, that software should be seen only as a stepping stone. Instructional sites created by course‐in‐a‐box software certainly are worthwhile, but the course or site produced by this software remains constrained by its box, even if that box is often commodious.

    doi:10.1080/10572259909364649

October 1997

  1. Selection of Technical Communication Concepts for Integration into an Accounting Information Systems Course: A WAC Case Study
    Abstract

    A project in writing-across-the curriculum was launched within a nationally ranked baccalaureate degree program in accountancy at a Boston area college. The project team, which comprised faculty from accountancy and technical communication, attempted to integrate technical communication skills, principally writing, into an accounting information systems course. To improve student writing in this way, the team had to determine what kinds of writing activities would successfully introduce accounting students to the discourse of their profession, and had to select, from all the communication skills that might be taught, only those that should be taught to complement the specialized content of the accounting information systems course. The team's collaborative process produced three critical planning decisions that greatly simplified the integration: 1) establishing Joseph Juran's TQM notion of fitness-for-use for evaluating the quality of student communications; 2) selecting only those forms of communication used in the profession's discourse community in assignments; and 3) teaching only those communication skills that support and enrich the principal technical skills taught in the accounting course. This strategy demonstrates that communication skills can be integrated within a technical course so as to enhance the students' understanding of technical content while improving the students' proficiency in written communication.

    doi:10.1207/s15427625tcq0604_2