Technical Communication, Global Edition

Höfundur Lannon; Gurak

Útgefandi Pearson International Content

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781292363592

Útgáfa 15

Höfundarréttur 2021

4.490 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • List of Sample Documents and Forms
  • A Topical List of the Guidelines Boxes
  • A Guide to the Checklists
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Brief Contents
  • Detailed Contents
  • Preface
  • Part 1: Communicating in the Workplace
  • Chapter 1: Introduction to Technical Communication
  • What Is Technical Communication?
  • Technical Communication Is a Digital and a Human Activity
  • Technical Communication Reaches a Global Audience
  • Technical Communication Is Part of Most Careers
  • Technical Communicators Play Many Roles
  • Main Features of Technical Communication
  • Reader-Centered
  • Accessible and Efficient
  • Often Produced by Teams
  • Delivered in Paper and Digital Versions
  • Purposes of Technical Communication
  • Documents That Inform
  • Documents That Instruct
  • Documents That Persuade
  • Preparing Effective Technical Documents
  • Case: Providing Information Readers Can Use
  • Case: Being Persuasive
  • Case: Considering the Ethical Issues
  • Case: Working on a Team and Thinking Globally
  • Projects
  • Chapter 2: Meeting the Needs of Specific Audiences
  • Analyze Your Document’s Audience and Purpose
  • Primary and Secondary Audiences
  • Your Relationship to Your Readers
  • Purpose of Your Document
  • Primary and Secondary Purposes
  • Intended Use of the Document
  • Assess the Audience’s Technical Background
  • Highly Technical Audience
  • Semitechnical Audience
  • Nontechnical Audience
  • Audiences with Varying Technical Backgrounds
  • Case: Tailoring a Single Document for Multiple Audiences
  • Digital Documents for Multiple Audiences
  • Anticipate Your Audience’s Preferences
  • Length and Details
  • Format and Medium
  • Tone
  • Due Date and Timing
  • Budget
  • Guidelines for Analyzing Your Audience and Its Use of the Document
  • Develop an Audience and Use Profile
  • Case: Developing an Audience and Use Profile
  • Checklist Analyzing Audience and Purpose
  • Projects
  • Chapter 3: Persuading Your Audience
  • What Is Persuasion?
  • Identify Your Specific Persuasive Goal
  • Try to Predict Audience Reaction
  • Expect Audience Resistance
  • Know How to Connect with the Audience
  • Case: Connecting with the Audience
  • Allow for Give-and-Take
  • Ask for a Specific Response
  • Never Ask for Too Much
  • Recognize All Constraints
  • Organizational Constraints
  • Legal Constraints
  • Ethical Constraints
  • Time Constraints
  • Social and Psychological Constraints
  • Consider this People Often React Emotionally to Persuasive Appeals
  • Support Your Claims Convincingly
  • Offer Convincing Evidence
  • Factual Statements
  • Statistics
  • Examples
  • Expert Testimony
  • Appeal to Common Goals and Values
  • Consider the Cultural Context
  • Digital Persuasion and Social Media
  • Guidelines for Persuasion
  • Shaping Your Argument
  • Checklist Persuasion
  • Projects
  • Chapter 4: Weighing the Ethical Issues
  • Recognize Examples and Causes of Unethical Workplace Communication
  • Yielding to Social Pressure
  • Mistaking Groupthink for Teamwork
  • Types of Communication Abuses in the Workplace
  • Suppressing Knowledge the Public Needs
  • Hiding Conflicts of Interest
  • Exaggerating Claims about Technology
  • Falsifying or Fabricating Data
  • Using Visual Images That Conceal the Truth
  • Stealing or Divulging Proprietary Information
  • Withholding Information People Need for Their Jobs
  • Exploiting Cultural Differences
  • Ethical Issues with Social and Digital Media
  • Rely on Critical Thinking for Ethical Decisions
  • Reasonable Criteria for Ethical Judgment
  • Ethical Dilemmas
  • Anticipate Some Hard Choices
  • Case: A Hard Choice
  • Learn to Recognize Legal Issues and Plagiarism
  • Learn to Recognize Plagiarism
  • Blatant Versus Unintentional Plagiarism
  • Plagiarism and the Internet
  • Plagiarism and Your Career
  • Consider this Ethical Standards are Good for Business
  • Decide When and How to Report Ethical Abuses
  • Guidelines for Ethical Communication
  • Checklist Ethical Communication
  • Projects
  • Chapter 5: Teamwork and Global Considerations
  • Teamwork and Project Management
  • Guidelines for Managing a Collaborative Project
  • Teamwork: Virtual and Face to Face
  • Guidelines for Running a Meeting
  • Identifying and Managing Conflicts in Collaborative Groups
  • Interpersonal Differences
  • Gender Differences
  • Cultural Differences
  • Managing Group Conflict
  • Overcoming Differences by Active Listening
  • Guidelines for Active Listening
  • Thinking Creatively
  • Brainstorm as a Way of Getting Started
  • Brainstorming with Digital Technologies
  • Mind-Mapping
  • Storyboarding
  • Reviewing and Editing Others’ Work
  • Guidelines for Peer Reviewing and Editing
  • Ethical Issues in Workplace Collaboration
  • Intimidating One’s Peers
  • Claiming Credit for Others’ Work
  • Hoarding Information
  • Global Considerations When Working in Teams
  • Interpersonal Issues in Global Teams
  • Digital Communication and Social Cues
  • Misunderstanding Cultural Codes
  • Misusing Humor, Slang, and Idioms
  • Misusing Culturally Specific References
  • Failing to allow for Easy Translation
  • Failing to Listen
  • Guidelines for Communicating on a Global Team
  • Checklist Teamwork and Global Considerations
  • Projects
  • Chapter 6: An Overview of the Technical Writing Process
  • Critical Thinking in the Writing Process
  • A Sample Writing Situation
  • Working with the Information
  • Planning the Document
  • Drafting the Document
  • Revising the Document
  • Make Proofreading Your Final Step
  • Guidelines for Proofreading
  • Digital Technology and the Writing Process
  • Checklist Proofreading
  • Projects
  • Part 2: The Research Process
  • Chapter 7 :Thinking Critically about the Research Process
  • Three Essential Approaches to Research
  • Asking the Right Questions
  • Case: Defining and Refining a Research Question
  • Exploring a Balance of Views
  • Achieving Adequate Depth in Your Search
  • Evaluating and Interpreting Your Findings
  • Primary versus Secondary Sources
  • Exploring Secondary Sources
  • Searching for Secondary Sources
  • Google and other search Engines
  • Wikipedia
  • Digital Libraries
  • Libraries and Library Web Sites
  • Types of Secondary Sources
  • Web Sites (General)
  • Government Web Sites
  • Blogs
  • Wikis (Including Wikipedia)
  • Social Media
  • Online Groups
  • News Outlets (Including Magazines and other Periodicals)
  • Books
  • Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles
  • Gray Literature
  • Reference Works
  • Guidelines for Researching on the Web and with Social Media
  • Exploring Primary Sources
  • Unsolicited Inquiries
  • Informational Interviews
  • Guidelines for Informational Interviews
  • Surveys
  • Observations and Experiments
  • Guidelines for Surveys
  • Consider this Frequently Asked Questions about Copyright
  • Projects
  • Chapter 8: Evaluating and Interpreting Information
  • Evaluate the Sources
  • Pay Special Attention to Evaluating Online Sources
  • Evaluate the Evidence
  • Interpret Your Findings
  • Identify Your Level of Certainty
  • Examine the Underlying Assumptions
  • Be Alert for Personal Bias
  • Consider Other Possible Interpretations
  • Consider this Standards of Proof Vary for Different Audiences
  • Avoid Distorted or Unethical Reasoning
  • Faulty Generalization
  • Faulty Causal Reasoning
  • Faulty Statistical Analysis
  • The Sanitized Statistic
  • The Meaningless Statistic
  • The Undefined Average
  • The Distorted Percentage Figure
  • The Bogus Ranking
  • Confusion of Correlation with Causation
  • The Biased Meta-Analysis
  • The Fallible Computer Model
  • Misleading Terminology
  • Acknowledge the Limits of Research
  • Obstacles to Validity and Reliability
  • Flaws in Research Studies
  • Social Media and Research Reporting
  • Guidelines for Evaluating and Interpreting Information
  • Checklist The Research Process
  • Projects
  • Chapter 9: Summarizing Research Findings and Other Information
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • What Readers Expect from a Summary
  • How to Create a Summary
  • Guidelines for Summarizing Information
  • Special Types of Summaries
  • Closing Summary
  • Informative Abstract (“Summary”)
  • Descriptive Abstract (“Abstract”)
  • Executive Abstract
  • Summarizing Information for Social Media
  • Checklist Summaries
  • Projects
  • Part 3: Organization, Style, and Visual Design
  • Chapter 10: Organizing for Readers
  • The Typical Shape of Workplace Documents
  • Outlining
  • An Outlining Strategy
  • The Formal Outline
  • Guidelines for Outlining
  • Storyboarding
  • Paragraphing
  • The Support Paragraph
  • The Topic Sentence
  • Paragraph Unity
  • Paragraph Coherence
  • Paragraph Length
  • Chunking
  • Providing an Overview
  • Organizing for Social Media and Global Audiences
  • Checklist Organizing Information
  • Projects
  • Chapter 11: Editing for a Professional Style and Tone
  • Editing for Clarity
  • Avoid Ambiguous Pronoun References
  • Avoid Ambiguous Modifiers
  • Unstack Modifying Nouns
  • Arrange Word Order for Coherence and Emphasis
  • Use Active Voice Whenever Possible
  • Use Passive Voice Selectively
  • Avoid Overstuffed Sentences
  • Editing for Conciseness
  • Avoid Wordy Phrases
  • Eliminate Redundancy
  • Avoid Needless Repetition
  • Avoid There Sentence Openers
  • Avoid Some It Sentence Openers
  • Delete Needless Prefaces
  • Avoid Weak Verbs
  • Avoid Excessive Prepositions
  • Avoid Nominalizations
  • Make Negatives Positive
  • Clean Out Clutter Words
  • Delete Needless Qualifiers
  • Editing for Fluency
  • Combine Related Ideas
  • Vary Sentence Construction and Length
  • Use Short Sentences for Special Emphasis
  • Finding the Exact Words
  • Prefer Simple and Familiar Wording
  • Avoid Useless Jargon
  • Use Acronyms Selectively
  • Avoid Triteness
  • Avoid Misleading Euphemisms
  • Avoid Overstatement
  • Avoid Imprecise Wording
  • Be Specific and Concrete
  • Use Analogies to Sharpen the Image
  • Adjusting Your Tone
  • Guidelines for Deciding about Tone
  • Consider Using an Occasional Contraction
  • Address Readers Directly
  • Use I and We When Appropriate
  • Prefer the Active Voice
  • Emphasize the Positive
  • Avoid an Overly Informal Tone
  • Avoid Personal Bias
  • Avoid Biased Language
  • Guidelines for Avoiding Biased Language
  • Global, Legal, and Ethical Implications of Style and Tone
  • Digital Writing and Editing
  • Checklist Style
  • Projects
  • Chapter 12: Designing Visual Information
  • Why Visuals Matter
  • When to Use Visuals and How to Choose the Right Ones
  • When to Use Visuals
  • Types of Visuals to Consider
  • Choosing the Right Visual
  • Using Software to Create Visuals
  • Tables
  • How to Construct a Table
  • Graphs
  • Bar Graphs
  • Simple Bar Graph
  • Multiple-Bar Graph
  • Horizontal-Bar Graph
  • Stacked-Bar Graph
  • 100 Percent Bar Graph
  • 3-D Bar Graph
  • Line Graphs
  • Simple Line Graph
  • Multiline Graph
  • Deviation Line Graph
  • Band or Area Graph
  • Multiple-Band Graph
  • Guidelines for Creating Tables and Graphs
  • Charts
  • Pie Charts
  • Organization Charts
  • Flowcharts
  • Tree Charts
  • Gantt and PERT Charts
  • Pictograms
  • Guidelines for Creating Charts
  • Graphic Illustrations
  • Diagrams
  • Exploded Diagrams
  • Cutaway Diagrams
  • Block Diagrams
  • Photographs
  • Maps
  • Symbols and Icons
  • Infographics
  • Guidelines for Creating Graphic Illustrations
  • Using Color and Presenting Visuals
  • Use Color to Organize
  • Use Color to Orient
  • Use Color to Emphasize
  • Guidelines for Incorporating Color
  • Presenting Visuals
  • Guidelines for Presenting Visuals
  • Ethical Considerations
  • Present the Real Picture
  • Present the Complete Picture
  • Don’t Mistake Distortion for Emphasis
  • Use Copyright Free Visuals or Credit the Work of Others
  • Guidelines for Obtaining and Citing Visual Material
  • Social Media and Cultural Considerations
  • Checklist Visuals
  • Projects
  • Chapter 13: Designing Pages and Documents
  • Page Design in Print and Digital Workplace Documents
  • Design Skills Needed by Technical Communicators
  • Word Processing and Desktop Publishing
  • Using Styles and Templates
  • Using Style Guides and Style Sheets
  • Creating a Design That Works for Your Readers
  • Shaping the Page
  • Provide Page Numbers, Headers, and Footers
  • Use A Grid
  • Use White Space to Create Areas of Emphasis
  • Provide Ample Margins
  • Keep Line Length Reasonable
  • Keep Line Spacing Consistent
  • Tailor Each Paragraph to its Purpose
  • Make Lists for Easy Reading
  • Guidelines for Shaping the Page
  • Styling the Words and Letters
  • Select an Appropriate Typeface
  • Use Type Sizes that are Easy to Read
  • Use Full Caps Sparingly
  • Guidelines for Styling the Words and Letters
  • Adding Emphasis
  • Guidelines for Adding Emphasis
  • Using Headings for Access and Orientation
  • Lay out Headings by Level
  • Decide how to Phrase your Headings
  • Make Headings Visually Consistent and Grammatically Parallel
  • Guidelines for Using Headings
  • Audience Considerations in Page Design
  • Designing Digital Documents
  • Adobe Acrobat™ and PDF files
  • Web Pages
  • Tablets, Smartphones, and E-reader Pages
  • Social Media Posts
  • Checklist Page Design
  • Projects
  • Part 4: Specific Documents and Applications
  • Chapter 14: Email
  • Email Basics and Types
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • Email Parts and Format
  • Email Style and Tone
  • Interpersonal Issues and Email
  • Choose the Right Approach for the Situation
  • Email and External Audiences
  • Ethical, Legal, and Global Issues When Using Email
  • Guidelines for Writing and Using Email
  • Checklist Email
  • Projects
  • Chapter 15: Workplace Memos and Letters
  • Memo Basics, Audience, and Purpose
  • Memo Parts and Format
  • Memo Tone
  • Common Types of Memos
  • Transmittal Memo
  • Summary or Follow-up Memo
  • Routine Miscellaneous Memo
  • Guidelines for Memos
  • Checklist Memos
  • Letter Basics, Audience, and Purpose
  • Letter Parts, Formats, and Design Elements
  • Standard Parts
  • Heading and Date
  • Inside Address
  • Salutation
  • Text
  • Complimentary Closing
  • Signature
  • Optional Parts
  • Attention Line
  • Subject Line
  • Typist’s Notation
  • Enclosure Notation
  • Copy (or Distribution) Notation
  • Postscript
  • Formats and Design Features
  • Letter Format
  • Quality Stationery
  • Uniform Margins and Spacing
  • Headers for Subsequent Pages
  • The Envelope
  • Letter Tone
  • Establish and Maintain a “You” Perspective
  • Be Polite and Tactful
  • Use Plain English
  • Decide on a Direct or Indirect Organizing Pattern
  • Global and Ethical Considerations When Writing Letters
  • Guidelines for Letters in General
  • Conveying Bad or Unwelcome News in Letters
  • Common Types of Letters
  • Inquiry Letters
  • Guidelines for Conveying Bad News
  • Guidelines for Inquiry Letters
  • Claim Letters
  • Guidelines for Claim Letters
  • Sales Letters
  • Guidelines for Sales Letters
  • Adjustment Letters
  • Guidelines for Adjustment Letters
  • Checklist Letters
  • Projects
  • Chapter 16: Résumés and Other Job-Search Materials
  • Assessing Your Skills and Aptitudes
  • Researching the Job Market
  • Plan Your Strategy
  • Focus Your Search
  • Explore Employment Resources
  • Learn to Network
  • Résumés
  • Parts of a Résumé
  • Contact Information
  • Career Objectives
  • Education
  • Work Experience
  • Personal Data and Interests
  • References
  • Portfolios
  • Using Templates
  • Organizing Your Résumé
  • Guidelines for Writing and Designing Your Résumé
  • Application Letters
  • Solicited Application Letters
  • Unsolicited Application Letters
  • Guidelines for Application Letters
  • Digital and Print Job Application Materials
  • Consider this Your Social Media Profile and the Job Search
  • Guidelines for Online Job Applications
  • Dossiers, Portfolios, and E-Portfolios
  • Dossiers
  • Portfolios and E-portfolios
  • Guidelines for Dossiers, Portfolios, and E-Portfolios
  • Interviews and Follow-Up Communication
  • Interviews
  • Follow-Up Communication
  • Thank you Notes
  • Acceptance or Refusal Letters
  • Guidelines for Interviews and Follow-Up Communication
  • Checklist Résumés
  • Checklist Application Letters
  • Checklist Supporting Materials
  • Projects
  • Chapter 17: Technical Definitions
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • Legal, Ethical, Societal, and Global Implications
  • Types of Definition
  • Parenthetical Definitions
  • Sentence Definitions
  • Expanded Definitions
  • Methods for Expanding Definitions
  • Etymology
  • History
  • Negation
  • Operating Principle
  • Analysis of Parts
  • Visuals
  • Comparison and Contrast
  • Required Conditions
  • Examples
  • Using Multiple Expansion Methods
  • An Expanded Definition for Semitechnical Readers
  • An Expanded Definition for Nontechnical Readers
  • Placing Definitions in a Document
  • Guidelines for Definitions
  • Checklist Definitions
  • Projects
  • Chapter 18: Technical Descriptions, Specifications, and Marketing Materials
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • Objectivity in Technical Descriptions
  • Elements of Descriptions
  • Clear and Limiting Title
  • Appropriate Level of Detail and Technicality
  • Visuals
  • Clearest Descriptive Sequence
  • Spatial Sequence
  • Functional Sequence
  • Chronological Sequence
  • Types of Technical Descriptions
  • A Complex Product Description
  • A Complex Process Description
  • Guidelines for Descriptions
  • Specifications
  • Types of Specifications
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • Guidelines for Specifications
  • Technical Marketing Materials
  • Guidelines for Technical Marketing Materials
  • Checklist Technical Descriptions
  • Checklist Specifications
  • Checklist Technical Marketing Materials
  • Projects
  • Chapter 19: Instructions and Procedures
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • Formats for Instructional Documents
  • Faulty Instructions and Legal Liability
  • Elements of Effective Instructions
  • Clear and Limiting Title
  • Informed and Accurate Content
  • Visuals
  • Appropriate Level of Detail and Technicality
  • Provide Background
  • Provide Adequate Detail
  • Offer Examples
  • Guidelines for Providing Appropriate Detail in Instructions
  • Include Troubleshooting Advice
  • Logically Ordered Steps
  • Notes and Hazard Notices
  • Readability
  • Use Direct Address, Active Voice, and Imperative Mood
  • Use Short and Logically Shaped Sentences
  • Use Parallel Phrasing
  • Phrase Instructions Affirmatively
  • Use Transitions to Mark Time and Sequence
  • Effective Design
  • Guidelines for Designing Instructions
  • Introduction-Body-Conclusion Structure
  • Introduction
  • Body: Required Steps
  • Conclusion
  • Online and Social Media Instructions
  • Online Help
  • Social Media Instructions
  • Procedures
  • Evaluating the Usability of Instructions and Procedures
  • Usability and the User Experience
  • Approaches for Evaluating a Document’s Usability
  • Think-Aloud Evaluation
  • Focus Groups
  • Checklist Instructions and Procedures
  • Projects
  • Chapter 20: Informal Reports
  • Informal Versus Formal Reports
  • Informational Versus Analytical Reports
  • Types of Informational Reports
  • Progress Reports
  • Guidelines for Progress Reports
  • Periodic Activity Reports
  • Guidelines for Periodic Activity Reports
  • Trip Reports
  • Guidelines for Trip Reports
  • Meeting Minutes
  • Guidelines for Meeting Minutes
  • Types of Analytical Reports
  • Feasibility Reports
  • Guidelines for Feasibility Reports
  • Recommendation Reports
  • Guidelines for Recommendation Reports
  • Justification Reports
  • Guidelines for Justification Reports
  • Peer Review Reports
  • Guidelines for Peer Review Reports
  • Checklist Informal Reports
  • Projects
  • Chapter 21: Formal Analytical Reports
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • Typical Analytical Problems
  • Causal Analysis: “Why Does X Happen?”
  • Case: The Reasoning Process in Causal Analysis
  • Comparative Analysis: “Is X OR Y Better for Our Needs?”
  • Case: The Reasoning Process in Comparative Analysis
  • Feasibility Analysis: “Is This a Good Idea?”
  • Case: The Reasoning Process in Feasibility Analysis
  • Combining Types of Analysis
  • Elements of an Effective Analysis
  • Clearly Identified Problem or Purpose
  • Adequate but Not Excessive Data
  • Accurate and Balanced Data
  • Fully Interpreted Data
  • Subordination of Personal Bias
  • Appropriate Visuals
  • Valid Conclusions and Recommendations
  • Self-Assessment
  • Structuring a Formal Report
  • Introduction
  • Body
  • Sources of EMF Exposure
  • Physiologic Effects and Health Risks from EMF Exposure
  • Debate Over Quality, Cost, and Status of EMF Research
  • Views from the Power Industry and The Public
  • Risk-Avoidance Measures being Taken
  • Conclusion
  • Summary and Overall Interpretation of Findings
  • Recommendations
  • Front Matter and End Matter Supplements
  • Front Matter
  • Letter of Transmittal
  • Title Page
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Tables and Figures
  • Abstract or Executive Summary
  • Text of the Report
  • End Matter
  • Glossary
  • Appendices
  • References or Works Cited List
  • A Situation Requiring an Analytical Report
  • The Situation
  • Audience and Use Profile
  • Guidelines for Reasoning through an Analytical Problem
  • Checklist Analytical Reports
  • Projects
  • Chapter 22: Proposals
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • The Proposal Process
  • Case: Submitting a Competitive Proposal
  • Types of Proposals
  • Planning Proposals
  • Research Proposals
  • Sales Proposals
  • Elements of a Persuasive Proposal
  • A Forecasting Title or Subject Line
  • Background Information
  • Statement of the Problem
  • Description of Solution
  • A Clear Focus on Benefits
  • Honest and Supportable Claims
  • Appropriate Detail
  • Readability
  • A Tone That Connects with Readers
  • Visuals
  • Accessible Page Design
  • Supplements Tailored for a Diverse Audience
  • Proper Citation of Sources and Contributors
  • Structuring a Proposal
  • Introduction
  • Body
  • Conclusion
  • A Situation Requiring a Formal Proposal
  • The Situation
  • Audience and Use Profile
  • Guidelines for Proposals
  • Checklist Proposals
  • Projects
  • Chapter 23: Oral Presentations and Video Conferencing
  • Advantages and Drawbacks of Oral Presentations
  • Avoiding Presentation Pitfalls
  • Planning Your Presentation
  • Analyze Your Audience and Purpose
  • Analyze Your Speaking Situation
  • Select a Type of Presentation
  • Informative Presentations
  • Training/Instructional Presentations
  • Persuasive Presentations
  • Action Plan Presentations
  • Sales Presentations
  • Select a Delivery Method
  • The Memorized Delivery
  • The Impromptu Delivery
  • The Scripted Delivery
  • The Extemporaneous Delivery
  • Preparing Your Presentation
  • Research Your Topic
  • Aim for Simplicity and Conciseness
  • Anticipate Audience Questions
  • Outline Your Presentation
  • Introduction
  • Body
  • Conclusion
  • Planning Your Visuals and Choosing a Media Format
  • Decide Which Visuals to Use and Where to Use Them
  • Create a Storyboard
  • Decide Which Visuals You Can Realistically Create
  • Be Selective
  • Make Visuals Easy to Read and Understand
  • Use the Right App to Prepare your Visuals
  • Choose the Right Media Format
  • Using PowerPoint and Other Presentation Apps
  • When and How to Use Handouts
  • Ethics and the Use of Presentation Apps
  • Case: PowerPoint and the Space Shuttle Columbia Disaster
  • Guidelines for Using Presentation Apps
  • Delivering Your Presentation
  • Rehearse Your Delivery
  • Check the Room and Setting Beforehand
  • Cultivate the Human Landscape
  • Get to Know your Audience
  • Be Reasonable
  • Display Enthusiasm and Confidence
  • Don’t Preach
  • Keep Your Listeners Oriented
  • Open with a Clear and Engaging Introduction
  • Give Concrete Examples
  • Provide Explicit Transitions
  • Review and Interpret
  • Plan for How You Will Use Any Noncomputer Visual Aids
  • Prepare
  • Organize
  • Avoid Listener Distraction
  • Manage Your Presentation Style
  • Use Natural Movements and Reasonable Postures
  • Adjust Volume, Pronunciation, and Rate
  • Maintain Eye Contact
  • Manage Your Speaking Situation
  • Be Responsive to Listener Feedback
  • Consider this Cross-Cultural Audiences May Have Specific Expectations
  • Stick to your Plan
  • Leave Listeners with Something to Remember
  • Allow Time for Questions and Answers (Q & A)
  • Guidelines for Delivering an Oral Presentation and Managing Listener Questions
  • Video Conferencing
  • Guidelines for Video Conferencing
  • Checklist Oral Presentations
  • Projects
  • Chapter 24: Blogs, Wikis, and Web Pages
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • Blogs
  • Internal Blogs
  • External Blogs
  • Wikis
  • Internal Wikis
  • External Wikis
  • Guidelines for Writing and Using Blogs and Wikis
  • Web Pages
  • How People Read Web Pages
  • Writing and Designing for the Web
  • Guidelines for Writing Web Pages
  • Guidelines for Designing Web Pages
  • Techniques and Technologies for Creating Web Sites
  • Planning Web Sites Using Storyboarding
  • Teamwork When Creating Web Sites
  • Tools for Creating Web Pages
  • Global, Ethical, and Legal Considerations
  • Global Considerations
  • Ethical Considerations
  • Legal Considerations
  • Guidelines for Global, Ethical, and Legal Considerations on the Web
  • Checklist Writing and Designing for Blogs, Wikis, and the Web
  • Projects
  • Chapter 25: Social Media
  • Considering Audience and Purpose
  • Audience as Contributor
  • Personal Versus Workplace Uses of Social Media
  • Using Social Media for Technical Communication
  • Customer Review Sites
  • Facebook
  • Google+
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn and Other Job Sites
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Instructional Videos for Social Media
  • Guidelines for Creating Instructional Videos for Social Media
  • Credibility and Legal Issues
  • Guidelines for Writing and Using Social Media
  • Checklist Social Media
  • Projects
  • Part 5: Resources for Technical Writers
  • Appendix A: A Quick Guide to Documentation
  • Taking Notes
  • Guidelines for Taking Notes
  • Quoting the Work of Others
  • Guidelines for Quoting
  • Paraphrasing the Work of Others
  • Guidelines for Paraphrasing
  • What You Should Document
  • How You Should Document
  • MLA Documentation Style
  • MLA Parenthetical References
  • MLA Works Cited Entries
  • MLA Sample Works Cited Pages
  • Discussion of Figure A.4
  • APA Documentation Style
  • APA Parenthetical References
  • APA Reference List Entries
  • APA Sample Reference List
  • Discussion of Figure A.5
  • Appendix B: A Quick Guide to Grammar, Usage, and Mechanics
  • Grammar
  • Sentence Fragments
  • Run-On Sentences
  • Comma Splices
  • Faulty Agreement—Subject and Verb
  • Faulty Agreement—Pronoun and Referent
  • Dangling and Misplaced Modifiers
  • Faulty Parallelism
  • Faulty Coordination
  • Faulty Subordination
  • Faulty Pronoun Case
  • Punctuation
  • Period
  • Question Mark
  • Exclamation Point
  • Semicolon
  • Colon
  • Comma
  • Apostrophe
  • Quotation Marks
  • Ellipses
  • Brackets
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