| Notes toward a socially informed pedagogy for computer documentation |
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ACM Journal of Computer Documentation (JCD)
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Volume 25 , Issue 4 (November 2001)
table of contents
COLUMN: Commentaries
table of contents
Pages: 132 - 140
Year of Publication: 2001
ISSN:1527-6805
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 4, Downloads (12 Months): 31, Citation Count: 0
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ABSTRACT
This article extends Johnson-Eilola's main argument and then, using a thought experiment, examines an extended example of its implications. The experiment follows a student who learns how to produce technical communication artifacts following the philosophy that informs most technical communication classes and that leads to production of the functional but not conceptual systems Johnson-Eilola critiques. The article concludes by recommending changes in overall curricula and in individual courses that would better educate communicators to account for the social implications of their work.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
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Bernhardt, S. A. (1992). The design of sexism: The case of an army maintenance manual. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, 35(4), 217-221.
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Boiarsky, C., and Dobberstein, M. (1998). Teaching documentation writing: what else students---and instructors---should know. Technical Communication, 45(1), 38-46.
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Brasseur, L. E. (1993). Contesting the objectivist paradigm: gender issues in the technical and professional communication classroom. IEEE Transactions on Professional Communication, 36(3), 114-123.
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Johnson, R. R. (1996). Tales from the crossing: professional communication internships in the electronic workplace. In P. Sullivan and J. Dautermann (Eds.), Electronic literacies in the workplace: Technologies of writing (238-252). Urbana, IL: National Council of Teachers of English.
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MacKinnon, J. (1993). Becoming a rhetor: developing writing ability in a mature, writing-intensive organization. In R. Spilka (Ed.), Writing in the workplace: New research perspectives (pp. 41-55). Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press.
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Sauer, B. A. (1994). Sexual dynamics of the profession: Articulating the ecriture masculine of science and technology. Technical Communication Quarterly, 3(3), 309-323.
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Winner, L. (1986). The whale and the reactor: A search for limits in an age of high technology. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
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