Added by Geoff Sauer on Sep 22, 2009.
Average rating: 3.00/5.00 (n=1)
 


This study explores design presentations that were graded by engineering faculty in order to assess the distinguishing features of those that were successful. Using a thematic analysis of 17 videotaped, final presentations from a capstone chemical engineering (CHE) course, it explores the rhetorical strategies, oral styles, and organizational structures that differentiate successful and unsuccessful team presentations. The results suggest that successful presenters used rhetorical strategies, oral styles, and organizational structures that illustrated students’ ability to negotiate the real and simulated relational and identity nuances of the design presentation genre—in short, they illustrated students’ relational genre knowledge.
 
  View both works by Dannels, Deanna P.  
  View all 120 works published by Journal of Business and Technical Communication  

Please share your rating/opinion of "Features of Success in Engineering Design Presentations: A Call for Relational Genre Knowledge".
 PoorExcellent 
The link to this work seems to be broken.

Copyright © 2001-09 by the EServer. All rights reserved.Add a Work | Update this Work | Discussion Forum | Habitués