A directory of resources inthe field of technical communication.

CPTSC

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26.
#22194

Crossing Institutional and Programmatic Identity Boundaries: The Possibilities of an Online Graduate Consortium   (peer-reviewed)

Should institutional boundaries prevent online students from learning from the best professors available? What is the effect of employing remote professors on a program's identity, and how do remote or distant professors fit into a faculty's programmatic and pedagogical profile?

Cargile Cook, Kelli. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Articles>Education>Online

27.
#23380

Crossing the Boundaries of Instruction: Assessing Web-Based Courses

We recently conducted survey research to discover students' responses to our web-based courses and online programs. We wanted to know their reactions to the course materials, teaching methods, interactions with faculty and other students, as well as their own competence in the particular subject area following such as course. While we are discovering that students are generally satisfied with all aspects of the courses, they express valid and noteworthy concerns.

Tovey, Janice and Michelle F. Eble. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Articles>Education>Assessment>Online

28.
#19088

(Deeply) Resisting Arrest: Beyond the Either/Or of Information Technology in Technical & Scientific Communication Programs   (peer-reviewed)

If I choose to walk or ride a bicycle to work in the morning, will I be perceived as an anti-technology Luddite because I have resisted driving my car? Probably not. In fact, I might be seen as someone who is environmentally aware and health conscious. When it comes to information technology, however, such resistance is seen quite differently.

Johnson, Robert R. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Academic>Education>Technology

29.
#21562

Designing Institutional Space to Bridge Institutional Divides   (PDF)   (peer-reviewed)

Professional/technical writing has long been an effective curricular site for off-campus outreach. Especially compared to other humanities' disciplines (not that that category provides any stiff competition), professional/technical writing has emphasized practical application and liaison between the university and business/industry. Two of the chief reasons I am attracted to this field are its pragmatic orientation and its focus on writing-in-the-world.

Porter, James E. CPTSC Proceedings (2001). Articles>Education>Business Communication

30.
#19080

Directing Growth and Growing Directors: Developing Leaders for Technical Communication Programs   (peer-reviewed)

Designing and directing technical communication programs requires special skills. Clearly faculty taking on these roles must be well-versed in the scholarship of the discipline. But they face additional challenges not often faced by other department chairs or program directors, especially those in liberal arts disciplines. Here’s a brief overview of some of these challenges.

Hansen, Craig. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Academic>Education>WPA

31.
#21822

Disciplinary Boundaries: Where (and How) Should Usability Testing Be Taught?   (PDF)   (peer-reviewed)

With the rapid rise of interest in usability testing, especially with the demise of a daily increasing number of dotcom companies (and the headlines resulting from the 'butterfly ballot'), the question arises as to where (and how) a course in usability testing should be taught. When I first started teaching a graduate course in technical and professional communication, I created it to focus on documentation issues and to educate future technical communicators about the role they could play in testing and inadvocating usability testing for their products. The argument went something like this: who better than the technical communicators--the user advocates–to initiate usability testing within organizations. What better place to start than with the documentation?

Barnum, Carol M. CPTSC Proceedings (2001). Articles>Education>Usability

32.
#22164

Do Technical Writers Need a Help Applications Course?   (peer-reviewed)

Weber State University is in the process of developing a major in Professional & Technical Writing (PTW). Currently, students enroll as English majors with an Emphasis in PTW, which consists of four courses in PTW that students take in addition to other English courses. The minor consists of the same PTW courses plus two interdisciplinary classes, which are determined in consultation with an advisor. The problem is that students who wish to do PTW must take the same number of literature classes as other English majors. Often they do not receive instruction in document design, other than a cursory treatment in the service course. A full major would better prepare students to enter the job market without losing connections to critical theory and humanistic approaches to texts-connections they receive in English Department courses.

McShane, Becky Jo. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Articles>Education>Documentation>Help

33.
#21815

Do We Know Who We Are and Where We Belong? Challenge in the Midst of Change   (PDF)   (peer-reviewed)

Over the past few years, we have been re-thinking the focus and direction of the graduate program in technical and science communication at Drexel University. At the same time, we are also dealing with a disciplinary change, as we have split from our long-time home in the Department of Humanities and Communication and formed a new Department of Culture and Communication with our colleagues from sociology and anthropology.

Friedlander, Alexander. CPTSC Proceedings (2001). Articles>Education>Graduate

34.
#19090

The Dual Mission of the Community College and Implications for Technical Writing Instruction   (peer-reviewed)

Technical writing education in the community college is complicated by the need to serve multiple populations, including traditional college students, vocational/certificate students, and community businesses. At Heartland Community College (HCC), the Corporate Education Department serves the needs of businesses by providing workshops of varying lengths and content areas. At the same time, the Writing Program and the English Department serve the needs of traditional and vocational students through writing courses in composition, technical writing, and business writing. Since each department espouses different philosophies and is addressing the needs of a different audience, technical writing instruction varies across the College. Rarely does one course design affect the other, yet I believe that conversations between departments could help the College resolve some of the contradictions that accompany its dual mission.

Kratz, Stephanie. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Articles>Education>Writing>Technical Writing

35.
#14453

Electronic Support Systems for Technical Communication Teachers   (PDF)   (peer-reviewed)

This presentation provided a rationale for electronic support systems and an overview of how such systems can be designed to meet the needs of technical communication teachers and programs.

Selber, Stuart A. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Presentations>Education>Online>EPSS

36.
#19067

Embracing Digital Media in Engineering   (peer-reviewed)

New models for program development in technical and scientific communication are imperative. Demand for communicative expertise continues to expand rapidly yet traditional approaches for supporting student competence fall far short of expectations.

Atkinson, Dianne. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Academic>Education>Engineering

37.
#22178

Expanding Our Borders to New Sites of Practice   (peer-reviewed)

Vital academic programs have a component in practice and an obvious connection of research and theory to the undergraduate classroom. This position (not a truth) could explain, in part, the growth of technical communication as an academic discipline over the past two decades while the study of literature, often in the same department, has declined.

Rude, Carolyn D. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Articles>Education>TC

38.
#22189

Expanding the Borders of Our Curriculum to Include Communities of Practice   (peer-reviewed)

What does the profession look like today? We see writers who specialize in running usability tests; writers who work with XML and database tools to manage single content sources for multiple delivery vehicles; writers who develop content and then design the layout of that content for every kind of print and electronic media, writers who grab the latest hot authoring tool and produce Web-based customer support. And the list could go on and on. The common denominator is writing skills.

Harner, Sandi. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Articles>Education>TC

39.
#19081

The Extension of Technical Writing into Performance Consulting   (peer-reviewed)

Perhaps the trouble for academic programs that teach workplace writing begins with the term 'technical communications.' Perhaps the trouble grows with those programs’ focus on the teaching of writing rather than on the development of professionals who bring complex, strategic writing/thinking processes into work communities.

Hile, Julie. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Academic>Education>Writing>Technical Writing

40.
#26536
41.
#26523

Globalization, Pedagogy, and Research

Four presentations about the teaching of scientific and technical communication programs in a highly international industry climate.

Cleary, Yvonne, Clinton R. Lanier, Russel Hirst and Kirk R. St. Amant. CPTSC (2005). Presentations>Education>Globalization

42.
#19100

Going it Alone: How a Freestanding Program Develops Its Own Identity   (peer-reviewed)

Going it alone, the SFSU program has integrity as a community, yet struggles a bit within an institutional structure designed for established discipline departments.

Rehling, Louise. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Academic>Education>WPA

43.
#22192

Going the Distance: Online Teachers' Perspectives on the Usability and Sustainability of Teaching Writing Online   (peer-reviewed)

Distance education research tends to focus on students' experiences in the online classroom because students are the bread-and-butter of distance learning programs.

Kitalong, Karla Saari. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Articles>Education>Online

44.
#23370

Going Wireless at the Border   (peer-reviewed)

Those who find themselves the solo technical writing faculty in their department often have to deal with infrastructural issues as well as curricular and programmatic concerns. Infrastructure involves creating learning environments conducive to building skills students need to be qualified technical communicators, and such learning environments often require access to technology.

Carnegie, Teena A.M. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Academic>Education>Technology

45.
#21820

Graphics, Design and Technical Communication: Exploring Disciplinary Boundaries  (link broken)   (PDF)

How much about graphics and visual design should the courses in our technical communication programs cover? This has become a programmatic issue because technical writing has become more graphically dependent. This is true in many arenas: when designing electronic or print documents suchas brochures, issues such as color theory, perspective, and proportionality come into play along with the rhetoric of the written word. The crossover between the visual and the linguistic is most evident in newmedia, especially in Web design.

LaGrandeur, Kevin. CPTSC Proceedings (2001). Design>Graphic Design>TC

46.
#19099

The Greater the Resistance the Higher the Voltage? or, How to Know When to Pull the Plug on a Technical Writing Program   (peer-reviewed)

It is not industry collaboration that has caused the Wayne State program to founder. Indeed, many in the English Department might bristle at that term, believing the program is thriving. Nevertheless, contradictions within the department that reflected and repeated historical patterns have allowed the program to wither.

Ranney, Frances J. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Academic>Education>WPA

47.
#19093

Growing Technical Communication Programs through Recruiting   (peer-reviewed)

This paper lists recruitment strategies that technical communication programs can use. Its purpose is to prompt discussion at the CTPSC conference in response to the following question: Which strategies bear the most promise for recruiting sufficient numbers of students to supply the growing need for technical communicators?

Maylath, Bruce A.R. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Academic>Education>WPA

48.
#19065

Here Comes That Song Again: The Theory and Practice Blues   (peer-reviewed)

An issue that continues to affect our strategies for developing undergraduate programs is the old contest between theory and practice, or, as it frequently occurs in technical communication programs, between theory and tools. Should we focus our undergraduate programs on understanding principles of communication in the technical world or should we focus on teaching the tools that are called for in the job ads for technical communicators?

Allen, Nancy J. CPTSC Proceedings (2000). Academic>Education>Undergraduate>Theory

49.
#22193

Heuristics for Sustainable Distance Education   (peer-reviewed)

Discusses eight conditions for technological change that can support innovation in educational settings. These conditions, which were first directed toward library contexts and then studied in a variety of education-related contexts, encapsulate the majority of sustainability issues associated with distance education. These eight conditions are not exhaustive, but programs that achieve many of them will probably experience a high degree of sustained success.

Selber, Stuart A. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Articles>Education>Instructional Design>Online

50.
#22450

History of Technical and Scientific Communication  (link broken)

History is a crucial dimension of any legitimate academic field because it identifies it as having lasting interest and signficance and, like a living organism, as a growing, evolving, coherent entity that progresses over time and advances to more sophisticated forms. History, after all, is scholarship and vice versa.

Dombrowski, Paul M. CPTSC Proceedings (2003). Articles>TC>History

 
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