For courses in Technical Communication. Comprehensive, user-friendly instruction in workplace writing, technical communication, business writing. Today’s employees are tasked with writing documents such as emails, memos, letters, and informal reports, as well as more complex forms of communications such as formal reports, proposals, web pages, and presentations. Technical Communication, Fourteenth Edition builds upon the authority of the previous editions byclearly guiding students to write documents persuasively, effectively, and with an eye towards technological innovations and global communications. It incorporates the interpersonal, logical, ethical, and cultural demands of these different forms of workplace communications and provides students with the necessary skills to navigate these nuisances. Building on research and writing skills and touching on the importance of ethics, the authors prepare students for technical writing in any field. Also available with MyWritingLab™ MyWritingLab is an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work with this text to engage readers and improve results. Within its structured environment, readers practice what they learn, test their understanding, and pursue a personalized study plan that helps them better absorb course material and understand difficult concepts. In addition to the full eText, activities directly from the text are available within MyWritingLab. These include the written assignments, readings from the text, review exercises and more.
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Pretty unimpressive. If you know the basics about a certain type of document, you probably won't learn anything new about that type of document. Also, if you know basic formatting rules for white space and fonts and the like, you won't learn anything new. Lots of info is redundant and the tone is quite condescending if you already have some experience. If you are a complete newbie to writing neutral, factual documents, this will be helpful; but if you've done it before successfully, it's not at all useful. I was hoping there would have been enough new information in here to warrant me keep it as a reference, but it's going back to the bookstore once the semester's over.
Several years ago when I was working at Pearson I was generously allowed to walk off with a large number of textbooks, presumably in exchange for them not paying us very much. One of the textbooks I acquired was the fourth Canadian edition (why, I do not know) of Technical Communication, which, unsurprisingly, is a book about technical writing. This then sat around on my shelves for ten years while I vaguely intended to read it. Last year I somewhat more specifically intended to read it, but didn’t, which I rediscovered when I was putting together my 2022 goals after having immediately forgotten about all my 2021 goals the second the merger was announced. Therefore, I finally started reading it in bits and pieces, to see if anything in it might be useful to me.
Frankly, some of it is and some of it isn’t. I always find it somewhat useful to review stuff I already know, if only to remind myself to think consciously about things I might be doing on autopilot, but I think I had been hoping that there would be more information that was really specific to technical writing/editing, whereas a lot of it was more about regular writing and research skills and general office communication norms that would likely be applicable in pretty much any field. But there was some useful content on graphics and data visualization, and some chapters specifically dedicated to different types of memos and reports–including one for site reports, which might come in useful since I’ve been having some difficulty tracking down any written training materials whatsoever to help develop instruction on site report writing. So overall I think it’s a useful reference to have on hand and I’m glad I finally read it, but it wasn’t a particularly mind-blowing or enjoyable read, even by textbook standards.
This book had some interesting information, but it was also overly prescriptive in many ways, and extremely redundant. It needs to have the redundant info (such as the types of audiences) combined in one place, and then half of the rest of the fat cut out. Technical communication is apparently supposed to be about making someone take action. The book talks about making things concise and motivating. It really needs to practice what it preaches. Also, some of it seemed extremely outdated (maybe it is just my inexperience); who writes memorandums anymore? It is apparently a short informational document which includes a subject, to, from and date at the top. I call that an "email".
No matter how many times they update this book, it is still out of date. My department has been using it for a very long time, and it never changes very much. I've finally been able to switch to another book which is current and fully considers technology and culture. This is the book I switched to: Technical Communication Today. It is excellent and highly recommended.
This text taught me how to write an awesome resume. It covers research (p 124), evaluating and interpreting information (p 152), White space and eleminating visual noise (p 287), giving the audience everything it needs to know (p 80), organization (p 191), designing visual information (p 245), how to conduct a usability test, ample sample templates and so much more. I will be using this as my document writing reference it is designed so well. Buy it, read it, use it.