Added by Geoff Sauer on May 23, 2008.
Average rating: 3.00/5.00 (n=2, std dev: 1.41)
 


What we consider to be good technical writing often reflects an American cultural perspective. One facet of this cultural orientation is that technical writing tends to use a low-context style. Most notably, we tend to write user assistance as if users have never seen the user interface we are explaining. Secondly, we tend to write user assistance as if users have never even used software before. But users rarely go to Help before they have tried to accomplish a task on their own first, and most users today have extensive experience using software and are familiar with the standard ways of interacting with user interfaces. So a user interface is a high-context artifact—one a user has already seen before reading our documentation and that uses rules and conventions the user already knows.
 
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Anonymous Would benefit from a look at Peter W. Cardon's "Critique of Hall’s Contexting Model".

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