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Technical Writing Audience Who are your readers? What is

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Title: Technical Writing Audience Who are your readers? What is


1
Technical Writing
2
KEYS TO WRITING SUCCESSFUL TECHNICAL PROSE
  • Purpose
  • Audience
  • Style
  • Accuracy
  • Completeness

3
Audience
  • Who are your readers?
  • What is their level of technical expertise and
    background?
  • What are their needs?
  • How will you successfully satisfy those needs?

4
Audience knowledge background
  • Highly Technical
  • Semi-Technical
  • Non-Technical
  • Note aim at lowest level of knowledge among your
    readers.

5
Developing Audience Awareness
  • Write as if you are providing answers to embedded
    questions
  • Imagine questions the reader will naturally ask
    about the system and answer them
  • Anticipate the reader's expectations and fulfill
    them

6
Writing Style
  • Write for your readers
  • Write to inform, not impress
  • Less is more

7
Basic Principles Of WritingEffective Technical
Prose
  • Clarity
  • Conciseness
  • Readability
  • Coherence
  • Accuracy Completeness

8
Achieving Clarity
  • 1. Organize your materials logically
  • Answer embedded questions in a logical
    sequence.
  • Proceed from the simple to the complex from
    general concepts to detailed information.
  • Place highly detailed and secondary materials in
    appendices.
  • 2. Use short, simple sentences.
  • 3. Use the active voice.

9
Achieving Clarity
  • 4. Use punctuation accurately avoid using
    dashes, slashes, parenthesis, and other ambiguous
    punctuation marks.
  • 5. Keep related words together place modifiers
    close to the words they modify.

10
Achieving Clarity
  • 6. Avoid vague referents, such as it, this,
    and that.
  • 7. Replace complex words with simple words
    "later" for "subsequently," "use" for "utilize,"
    etc.
  • 8. Clearly define technical terminology.
  • 9. Summarize complex procedures ideas in simple
    lists, diagrams, charts, tables, other visuals.

11
  • Conciseness Use the Active Voice
  • Notice that the passive voices always
  • Uses the wordy and weak verb to be forms
    instead of strong descriptive verbs.
  • Uses the past tense verb form instead of the
    active strong present tense form.
  • Alters the normal syntax order of
    Subject-verb-object so that the Subject-is
    acted upon- by the Object.

12
Example of passive voice corrected to more
concise active voice
  • Passive
  • Jim is in the process of being kicked by john.
  • Jim is being kicked by john.
  • Jim is kicked by john.
  • Active
  • John kicks Jim.

13
Example of passive voice corrected to more
concise active voice
  • Passive
  • The return key should be pressed by the user.
  • The return key should be pressed.
  • Active
  • Press the return key.

14
Achieving Conciseness
  • 1. Omit unnecessary words
  • "the fact that,"
  • "very rapidly,"
  • "the reason for this is because," etc.
  • 2. Replace
  • future tense (use present tense)
  • passive voice, (is, am, are, was, were and be)
  • weak verbs (forms such as "will," "be," "do,"
    "make")
  • .

15
Achieving Readability
  • Present ideas logically in order of need,
    function, or complexity
  • Guide your readers' expectations by using
    transitional, connecting sentences between
    paragraphs sections.

16
Achieving Readability
  • Use examples, lists, visuals, illustrations,
    charts to aid reader comprehension vary your
    presentation.
  • Use lots of white space only a few different
    type fonts.

17
Method of Development
  • Different types of descriptions use different
    methods.
  • Chronological order
  • Sequence
  • Use general definitions
  • Use analogies similes metaphors
  • Comparisons
  • Use illustrations
  • Drawings
  • Diagrams
  • Photographs
  • Charts

18
Types of Descriptions
  • Description of features
  • Description of procedure
  • Description of products

19
Description of External Features
  • Describes briefly the external features of the
    product.
  • Can be found in catalogues and order forms.
  • HP refill kit, black, for use in C6615A cartridge.

20
  • DESKTOP TALKING CALCULATOR
  • Calculator with sloping keypad. Clearly announces
    all functions and numbers. Functions include
    addition, subtraction, multiplication, division,
    percentage and memory.

21
Metric Ruler
  • Yellow plastic 30cm metric ruler with bold visual
    and tactual markings each centimeter and half
    centimeter. Larger markings each 5cm.

22
Wikki Stix
  • Colorful waxed sticks that can be twisted,
    stuck on surfaces and shaped then untwisted and
    reused. Comes in a set of 48.

23
TACTILE PROTRACTOR
  • Yellow plastic with bold visual and tactual
    markings. Supplied with a set of chart pins and a
    location sleeve to assist in maintaining the
    protractor position.

24
SIGNATURE GUIDE
  • Credit card sized, durable black plastic guide
    with a rectangular cut-out (1.3 x 7cm) in the
    centre to correspond with a standard size
    signature. Useful for signing forms and letters.

25
POSTURERITE LAP DESK
  • Tray-style desk that fits users lap by way of
    soft padding underneath the desk. Features a bar
    at bottom edge of tray-top to stop books
    slipping.

26
Description of Procedure
  • Similar to instructions
  • They are mainly intended to give readers an
    understanding of the general process rather than
    instructing them how to work through it. See Page
    138

27
Description of Products
  • Gives detailed information on a product such as
  • Appearance
  • Functions
  • Components
  • History

28
Description of Products
  • Should ask the basic questions to answer this
    type of description are
  • What is it like?
  • What is it used for?
  • What are the parts of the product?
  • How do the parts fit together?
  • How does it operate?
  • How do you use it?
  • See page 139-142

29
Operating
  • Instructions

30
Operating Instructions
  • Work Place care and use of
  • Forms
  • Equipment
  • Tools
  • Consumers
  • New products

31
Operating Instruction
  • Unlike descriptions, instructions enable the
    reader to do something with minimum hesitation.
  • They do not necessarily require him to understand
    the operation.
  • Gives the user necessary steps and details so
    that the operators can get the job done without
    unreasonable guesswork.

32
Analyzing Your Audience
  • Ask yourself questions
  • How much do the readers need to know to operate
    the product safely and properly?
  • What do they already know about the product?
  • Do they know the terminology?
  • Are they likely to read the instructions in a
    quiet place or noisy surroundings

33
Components of Instructions
  • Headings
  • Introductory explanations
  • Tools or materials
  • Warnings
  • General background
  • Sequenced instructions
  • Trouble-shooting guide
  • See page 150-151

34
Assignment
  • Page 144-145
  • Exercise III
  • Page 155-156
  • Exercise I
  • Extended exercise
  • Find an unusual object that you know how to use
    but use an object that is not used by most
    people.
  • Write instruction that are easy to read and
    follow.
  • It must have at least 10 steps.
  • Have three people who have not used the object
    before use your instructions and complete the
    task.
  • Make revisions between each person.
  • Have each of the three people write a one
    sentence summary of their experience.
  • You write a concluding paragraph explaining the
    experience and any revisions to the instructions
    you needed to make.

35
The End
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