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Communicating Effectively

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Make documents easier to skim. Developing Effective Headings. Introduction. Background ... Flow tube experiments to test this process are discussed. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Communicating Effectively


1
Communicating Effectively
  • Tips for Improving Your Writing
  • Marie C. Paretti
  • Director, Engineering Communications Program

2
Developing Communication
a report must be put together with as much care
as a precision instrument. Ernest M. Cohn,
Approaches to Scientific Writing Form follows
function. Frank Lloyd Wright
Analyze Audience, Purpose, Context, Goals
3
Successful Writing Is Useful
  • It achieves your goals
  • It achieves your audiences goals . . .
  • for information
  • for action
  • for ease of use
  • It adapts content, organization, language, style,
    and design to audience needs

4
We Write What We Know
  • In conducting the research for this project, I
    first went to the library and searched the
    catalogue for material on biosensors. I found
    several books listed in the catalogue, but only
    two of those were helpful. I then talked to the
    reference librarian about where else to look. She
    pointed me to the relevant databases and showed
    me how to search on-line. My initial search
    yielded 10,624 sources, so I narrowed my topic to
    biosensors for detecting glucose levels in
    diabetics, and have found 14 current articles
    that seem helpful. I still have about 30
    abstracts to review to complete this portion of
    the literature search.

5
Instead of What Readers Need
  • I have completed 75 of my research.
  • Based on the information found to date, I have
    narrowed the topic to biosensors for detecting
    glucose in Type I diabetics. Thus far, my
    research has yielded
  • 2 texts covering the history and current use of
    glucose biosensors
  • 7 articles dealing with potential new materials
    for these sensors
  • 4 articles on the limitations of current sensors
  • 3 articles on pilot studies of alternative
    sensing mechanisms
  • Work Remaining By April 8, I will have reviewed
    and evaluated the remaining 30 articles found in
    my preliminary search.

6
Analyze Your Audience Before You Write
  • Key Factors
  • Purpose what do they want to do?
  • Learn
  • Act
  • Characteristics who are they?
  • Responsibilities, Concerns, Motivations
  • Contexts what circumstances influence them?
  • Budget, Resources, Schedules, Relationships
  • Key Decisions
  • Content
  • Organization
  • Language/Tone
  • Design

7
Determine Content Based on Audience and Purpose
  • What questions does the audience need to answer
    to meet their goals (learn, act/decide)?
  • Generate a list
  • Key Question How does this information help my
    audience accomplish their goals?
  • Evaluate your draft based on purpose
  • If you dont know how it supports the purpose,
    strongly consider deleting it.
  • Be brutal you will know far more than you end
    up putting in a given document/presentation

8
Content vs. Organization
  • Content provides the audience with all the
    information they need to meet their goals
  • Why is this information here?
  • Organization presents that information in the
    order that best (most easily) allows them to meet
    those goals
  • Why is this information here?

9
Adapt Common Strategies to Audience Needs
  • Sequential /Chronological
  • Cause ? Effect / Effect ? Cause
  • Problem ? Solution
  • Thesis ? Evidence
  • Division / Classification
  • Spatial
  • General ? Specific / Specific ? General
  • Order of Importance
  • Comparison
  • Point by Point
  • Object by Object

10
Explain Your Strategy to the Audience
  • Document overviews orient the audience.
  • This report outlines the work done by each member
    of the team, then provides a summary of work
    remaining and the required personnel.
  • This proposal summarizes the history of the
    department, outlines the current problems we are
    facing, and provides a detailed plan for
    resolving these problems.

11
Use Logical Transitions to Reinforce Your
Strategy
  • Sequence
  • First, Second, Third
  • Next, Previously, After, Before, While
  • Cause/Effect
  • Therefore, Consequently, As a result
  • Comparison/Contrast
  • Similarly, Likewise
  • However, Otherwise, Although, Nonetheless,
    Despite
  • http//www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/Transitions
    .html

12
Visual Design Can Communicate
  • Organization how the document is structured
  • Hierarchy how the parts relate to each other
  • Importance what information matters most

13
Headings
  • Help the audience understand the organizational
    strategy
  • Provide quick access to major points
  • Make documents easier to skim

14
Developing Effective Headings
  • Use headings to convey information
  • Introduction
  • Background
  • Method
  • Results
  • Discussion
  • Recommendations
  • Conclusions
  • Maintaining Soil Health
  • The Nature Conservancy Philosophy
  • Key Strategies
  • Soil Quality and Forest Health Underlying
    Principles
  • Benefits of Healthy Soil
  • Threats to Soil Health
  • Erosion Resulting From Road Building
  • Other Potential Effects of Timber Harvests
  • Related Management Practices

15
Developing Effective Headings
  • Use headings to convey hierarchy
  • Introduction
  • Background
  • Mark Generators
  • Line Pulse
  • Beam Generation
  • Transporting Beam
  • Pellets
  • Results
  • Conclusions
  • Introduction
  • Past Designs for Particle Beam Fusion
  • New Design for Particle Beam Fusion
  • Charging Mark Generators
  • Forming Line Pulse
  • Generating Particle Beam
  • Transporting Particle Beam
  • Irradiating Deuterium-Tritium Pellets
  • Performance Results of New Design
  • Conclusions and Recommendations

16
Lists
  • Visually segregate pieces of like information
  • Provide checklists
  • Reflect sequence
  • Highlight important/useful/relevant findings
  • When everything becomes a list, the visual effect
    declines

17
Developing Effective Lists
  • Design lists to meet audience needs.
  • Use numbers for lists that reflect sequential
    information.
  • Use bullets for list items without clear
    sequence.
  • Use lists judiciously to maintain their impact.
  • Limit the number of items in a list.
  • 7 Consider adding a layer of organization
  • Consider in-paragraph format for very short
    lists.
  • Punctuate all list items the same way.

18
Tools for Illustrating Concepts
  • Tables organize information
  • Charts graphs show numeric relationships
  • Pie
  • Bar
  • Line
  • Diagrams show relationship of parts or concepts
  • Flow charts illustrate processes
  • Drawings show physical or spatial relationships
  • Photographs present reality
  • Maps locate objects in space

19
Three Levels of Editing
  • Coherence Make the move from one idea (phrase,
    sentence, paragraph) to the next as logically
    coherent as possible
  • Clarity Make your sentences and sentence
    structures as clear as possible
  • Conciseness Make your sentences as concise and
    direct as possible

20
Coherence
  • Help readers follow the logic of your ideas
  • Section ? Section
  • Paragraph ? Paragraph
  • Sentence ? Sentence

21
Coherence Move from Old to New Information
  • Large earthquakes along a given fault segment do
    not occur at random intervals because it takes
    time to accumulate the strain energy for the
    rupture. The rates at which tectonic plates move
    and accumulate strain at their boundaries are
    approximately uniform.
  • Large earthquakes along a given fault segment do
    not occur at random intervals because it takes
    time to accumulate the strain energy for the
    rupture. Strain accumulates at the boundaries as
    the tectonic plates move the rates of this
    movement are approximately uniform.
  • Source Gopen, George and Judith A. Swan. The
    Science of Scientific Writing. American
    Scientist, 78550-558.

22
Coherence Use Transition Indicators to Provide
Logic
  • Sequence
  • First, Second, Third
  • Next, Previously, After, Before, While
  • Cause/Effect
  • Therefore, Consequently, As a result
  • Comparison/Contrast
  • Similarly, Likewise
  • However, Otherwise, Although, Nonetheless,
    Despite
  • http//www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/Transitions
    .html

23
Using Transition Indicators
  • Mount St. Helens erupted on May 18, 1980. A cloud
    of rock and gas surged northward from its
    collapsing slope. The cloud devastated more than
    500 square kilometers of forests and lakes. The
    effects of Mount St. Helens were well documented
    with geophysical instruments. The origin of the
    eruption is not well understood. Volcanic
    explosions are driven by a rapid expansion of
    steam. Some scientists believe the steam comes
    from groundwater heated by magma. Other
    scientists believe the steam comes from water
    originally dissolved in the magma. We have to
    understand the source of steam involved in
    volcanic eruptions. We have to determine how much
    water the magma contains.

24
Using Transition Indicators
  • Mount St. Helens erupted on May 18, 1980, causing
    a cloud of rock and gas to surge northward from
    its collapsing slope. This cloud devastated more
    than 500 square kilometers of forests and lakes.
    But while the effects of Mount St. Helens were
    well documented with geophysical instruments, the
    origin of the eruption is not well understood.
    Although we know that volcanic explosions are
    driven by a rapid expansion of steam, the source
    of the steam remains unclear. Some scientists
    believe it comes from groundwater heated by
    magma however, others believe it comes from
    water originally dissolved in the magma. Only
    when we determine the water content of the magma
    can more fully understand the source of steam
    involved in volcanic eruptions, and consequently
    understand the eruptions themselves.

25
Coherence Repeat Key Words to Make Connections
  • The challenge before us is to create a residual
    stand that can readily reproduce itself with a
    full complement of species and so remain useful
    to people. But if theres one thing Ive learned
    in the last 30 years working as a logger,
    procurement forester, and consulting forester, it
    is that there are no pat, easy answers. The
    situation is complex, because we are dealing with
    both people and the forest. To diagnose means to
    analyze the nature of a situation analysis
    involves asking a lot of questions. This article
    will deal with the questions we will cover the
    tools in the final article.

26
Coherence Repeat Key Words to Make Connections
  • With that in mind, the challenge before us is to
    create a residual stand that can readily
    reproduce itself with a full complement of
    species and so remain useful to people. But if
    theres one thing Ive learned in the last 30
    years working as a logger, procurement forester,
    and consulting forester, it is that there are no
    pat, easy answers for meeting that challenge.
    The situation is complex, because we are dealing
    with both people and the forest. Addressing that
    complexity means we have to diagnose the
    situation before we act. To diagnose means to
    analyze the nature of a situation analysis
    involves asking a lot of questions. This article
    will deal with the questions we will cover the
    tools for answering those questions in the final
    article.

27
Clarity
  • Create sentences that communicate their meaning
    easily
  • Clarity is not a function of length,
    technicality, or complexity of ideas
  • It is a function of language and structure
  • Meet your audiences needs and expectations

28
Clear Language Avoid Ambiguity
  • Place modifying words carefully
  • The proposed schedule is discussed below for the
    next four years.
  • Use concrete language
  • The solar receiver worked well.
  • Choose words carefully
  • We wanted to reduce the vibration at the exhaust
    as the exhaust duct was cracking.

29
Avoid Ambiguity
  • Be careful with pronouns especially it and this
  • Although engineers realized the design flaws in
    the Titanic soon after its sinking in 1912, the
    reason for the severe damage inflicted by the
    iceberg remained a mystery until its discovery in
    1985.
  • If you receive an email titled Win a Holiday,
    do not open it. It will erase everything on your
    hard drive. Forward this email to as many people
    as you can. This is a very malicious virus and
    not many people know about it.

30
Clear Language Avoid Unfamiliar Terms
  • Highly specialized language Highly specialized
    audience
  • The smallest of the URFs (UFRA6L), a
    207-nucleotide (nt) reading frame overlapping out
    of phase the NH2-terminal portion of the
    adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase) subunit 6 gene
    has been identified as the animal equivalent of
    the recently discovered H-ATPase subunit 8 gene.

31
Clear Sentences Keep the Subject Near the Verb
  • In this study, the opinions of both patients and
    physicians on the quality of health care are
    considered.

A
B
32
Subjects Belong Near Verbs
  • This study considers the opinions of both
    patients and physicians on the quality of health
    care.

A
B
33
Clear Sentences Avoid Strings of Modifiers
  • The more modifiers you place in front of the
    noun, the more information the readers must hold
    in their heads before they have a context
  • Solar One is a 10-megawatt solar thermal electric
    central receiver Barstow power pilot plant.
  • Solar One is a solar-powered pilot plant located
    in Barstow. It produces 10 megawats of
    electricity by capturing solar energy in a
    central receiver.

34
Clear SentencesPut Subjects in Topic Position
  • The opening section of the sentence, particularly
    the subject, establishes the focus of the idea
    presented
  • Bees disperse pollen.Pollen is dispersed by
    bees.
  • The company conducted a review that compares
    productivity level by department.The review
    conducted by the company compares productivity
    level by department.

35
Clear SentencesPut Main Ideas in Stress Position
  • The stress, or emphasis occurs at the end of
    the sentence
  • This study considers the opinions of both
    patients and physicians on the quality of health
    care.
  • This study considers the opinions on the quality
    of health care from both patients and physicians.

36
Main Ideas in Stress Positions
  • Although our productivity was down, our profits
    were up.Although our profits were up, our
    productivity was down.
  • The department performed superbly in all
    areas.In all areas, the department performed
    superbly.

37
Clear Paragraphs Develop Meaningful Topic
Sentences
  • Like the subject in a sentence, the topic
    sentence in a paragraph establishes the focus of
    that unit of thought.
  • The specimens were thin-walled tubes of 304L
    stainless steel
  • The experiment tested several specimens placed
    inside a circulating wind tunnel. The specimens
    were thin-walled.

38
Clear ParagraphsDevelop One Idea Per Paragraph
  • Visually, paragraphs serve as signals or cues for
    units of thought.

39
Conciseness Part 1 Go for the Verb
  • English is a verb-driven language our verbs do
    the work
  • The natural sentence pattern in English is
    subject verb, or actor - action
  • Write to take advantage of reader habits and
    expectations.

40
Choose Active Over Passive Voice
  • Passive voice hides the subject and generally
    requires more words
  • A new process for eliminating nitrogen oxides
    from diesel exhaust engines is presented in this
    paper. Flow tube experiments to test this process
    are discussed. The percentage decrease in
    nitrogen oxide emissions is revealed.
  • This paper presents a new process for eliminating
    nitrogen oxides from diesel exhaust. The results
    from flow tube experiments indicate that this
    process decreases nitrogen oxide emissions by
    eighty percent.

41
Avoid Nominalization
  • Using the noun form of the verb weakens its
    impact and, as usual, takes more words
  • -ment, -ion, -ance, -ing
  • The committee made a recommendation to hire
    additional staff.
  • The committee recommended hiring additional
    staff.
  • After submission of the proposal, the researchers
    awaited the results.
  • After submitting the proposal, the researchers
    awaited the results.

42
Rely on the Verb to do the Work
  • initiate a development ? start developing
  • make a decision ? decide
  • take measurements of ? measure
  • undertake the maintenance of ? maintain
  • provide indications of ? indicate
  • offer suggestions ? suggest

43
Limit Expletive Constructions
  • There are and It is constructions weaken the
    impact of sentences and . . . use more words!
  • There are several factors causing engineers to
    question the strength of the dam.
  • It was the final argument that finally persuaded
    the committee.
  • It is imperative that government officials
    respond to these issues.

44
Conciseness Part 2Cut the Fat
  • Often we add words or inflate language to sound
    professional. In reality, that inflation usually
    only makes our sentences longer!
  • A superfluity of culinary experts has a
    tendency to reduce the overall quality of the
    pottage.

45
Avoid Inflated Language
  • In light of the fact that ? Because
  • Despite the fact that ? Although
  • In the event that ? If
  • On the occasion of ? When
  • Has the capability to ? Can
  • Subsequent to ? After
  • In the vicinity of ? Near
  • In the absence of ? Without
  • http//wiz.cath.vt.edu/tw/TechnicalWriting/style/
    clarityphrases.htm

46
Avoid Redundancy Dont Repeat Words Needlessly
  • already existing
  • alternative choices
  • basic fundamentals
  • currently under way
  • continue to remain
  • completely eliminated
  • end result
  • first began
  • first and foremost
  • introduced a new
  • mix together
  • none at all
  • personal opinion
  • separate entities
  • start out
  • still persists
  • whether or not
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