English 3105: Technical
Writing for
Engineering
Syllabus, Fall 2008
Dr. M. Wendy Hennequin |
Contact Information: Office: Room 301, Humanities.
Office Hours:
MWF 7:30-9:10 and 11:30-12:30, T 3-5
Phone: 963-5724
e-mail: MWHennequin [at] gmail [dot] com
|
Official
Description
ENGL 3100, 3101, 3102 Technical Report Writing (3) (Formerly ENG 310E, 310S,
310C).
A
study of fundamentals of written reports in a variety of professional fields,
with the emphasis on grammar, sentence structure, and style, as well as on
specialized techniques. 3100 focuses on reports required in professional
engineering. 3101 is the study and preparation of forms and reports required of
social workers. 3102 is the study and preparation of forms and reports required
of students majoring in Criminal Justice. Acquaintance with documents of various
agencies is stressed.
The course has two main goals:
1. To teach the elements of technical writing, so that students will be qualified to do a technical writing internship.
2. To emulate a professional environment, so that students will be able to conduct themselves appropriately in a professional job.
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Required Texts and Materials
-
Anderson, Paul.
Technical Communication. 6th ed. Boston: Thompson Wadsworth,
2007. ISBN: 1413027504.
- Some mechanism for
transferring your computer files: e-mail, jump drive, CD-rom, diskette.
-
Access to the World Wide Web.
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Requirements
and Competencies
In order to pass this class, students must:
- have successfully completed English 1010 and 1020, or their equivalents.
- come to class.
- arrive on time. Students who do not arrive on time may be marked absent.
- participate in class discussions and on the e-mail discussion list.
- do all homework and assignments on time.
- collaborate with other students.
- complete all assignments.
- do high quality work, including participation work.
- act professionally.
- do original work. Plagiarism will result in a zero
for the assignment and / or a failing grade for the course.
At the end of the course, students will be able to:
- identify different types of technical documents and their elements.
- write clear, coherent technical documents that adhere to an appropriate
purpose.
- use verbal and visual techniques, such as chunking, white space,
headings, lists, graphics, etc., to promote usability, accessibility, and
organization.
- design usable and accessible documents.
- create web pages and slide show presentations.
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Grading
Grades on Assignments
Several assignments have only a writing component, and several have coding and web design components. Those that have both components will receive one grade for writing and another for coding / web design.
Technical Writing Grades
Technical writing serves to get information across to a target audience clearly, concisely, quickly, and completely, for a certain purpose. Technical writing must also follow standard writing practices, such as correct grammar, syntax, spelling, and citation conventions. Technical writing papers will be graded, therefore , on
- focus, or adherence to the purpose,
- clarity,
- organization,
- conciseness,
- appropriateness for the target audience,
- use of technical writing techniques to meet these criteria,
- visual design, and
- correct grammar,
spelling, syntax, and citation.
More often than not, a poor grade reflects not a failure of ideas but poor writing quality. Don't despair. Writing well takes practice--sometimes years of practice.
Participation Grades
Your participation forms a significant part of your grade. Participation consists of:
-
Attendance of class. Yes, I give you a point every day just for showing up. If you show up late, I may give you half a point or no points.
-
Preparation for class activities, such as commenting on other students' drafts.
-
Participation in classes. For each class in which you ask a relevant question, add something relevant to the discussion, bring in information, or make a relevant comment, you gain another point--on top of the one you gained for simply attending.
-
Meeting with me in my office (or elsewhere) outside of class also earns points.
- Perfect Attendance.
Students who attend every class will earn 5 points towards their class
participation.
- Excessive Absenteeism. Students who miss more than one week's
worth of classes (3 on MWF, 2 on TR, etc.) will fail class
participation. Students missing more than 2 weeks worth of classes
(6 on MWF, 2 on TR, etc.) will earn a 0 in class participation.
Semester Grade Calculation
-
Audience Assignment: 15%
-
Proposal and Presentation:
20%
- Instructions: 20%
-
Report: 20%
-
In-class Writing and
Quizzes: 10%.
- Participation:
15%
There is no final exam, but one assignment
may be due during exam week. Make your travel plans accordingly.
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Class Policies
Attending University is a job, an
internship which prepares students for their careers. I therefore expect my
students to treat the class as a professional commitment, rather than a pastime
or a hobby. My class policies emulate the expectations of professionals in the
workplace.
- Attendance is mandatory.
- Excused absences. For the purposes of class
participation, I will excuse absences only for
the following circumstances and only with proper documentation.
- Death in the immediate family. “Immediate family” includes
(step-)parents, parental guardians, (step-)sons,
(step-)daughters, (step-)siblings, and spouses.
- Serious and extended illness or injury lasting a week or
more (such as mononucleosis).
- University business (team travel, band travel, the Rising
Junior exam but not practices, meetings with your
advisor, or requirements for other classes).
- Court appearances required by sub poena or otherwise
mandated by the court.
- Disability-related absences.
- Students missing more than one week's worth of
classes (3 for a MWF class, 2 for a TR) will fail class participation.
- Students missing more than two weeks' worth of
classes (6 for a MWF class, 4 for a TR) will earn a 0 for class
participation.
See page 29 of the Undergraduate Catalogue for official university
policy.
- Be on time.
- Disability. I will make reasonable accommodations for
disabled students with documentation from Disabled Student Services.
- Students must bring me the accommodation letter from Disabled
Student Services by the second week of class.
- Absences related to your disability must be documented
individually and separately from the accommodation letter.
Electronics: Do not send e-mail, text, or instant messages, or surf
the Web, or use your cell phone or blackberry.
After 1 warning, I will
deduct FIVE POINTS off your FINAL GRADE.
Assignments are due at the beginning of class on the due dates.
- I do not accept late work except with prior arrangement.
- If you need an extension, you must request it one class day in
advance.
- Each student is allowed one (1) 24-hour emergency
extension to cover true emergencies such as computer melt-down,
printer failure, or vehicular mishaps. Students must tell me
that they are using the extension when the paper is due and must
deliver the paper to my mailbox (in Humanities 104) or my e-mail
within 24 hours.
Make-ups: Class work must be done in class.
- Quizzes and in-class writing work cannot be made up.
Students who are excused for the day are excused for the work; all
others who miss the class earn a zero for the assignment.
- I may allow a student with convincing documentation to make up a
major test.
- The final exam must be taken during the exam period, and I
cannot change the date of a student's exam. This is university
policy.
Do your own work.
The TSU Undergraduate Catalogue says this about academic fraud:
Plagiarism, cheating, and other forms of
academic dishonesty are prohibited. Students guilty of academic misconduct,
either directly or indirectly through participation or assistance, are
immediately responsible to the instructor of the class. In addition to the
other possible disciplinary sanctions which may be imposed through the
regular institutional procedures as a result of academic misconduct, the
instructor has the authority to assign an ‘F’ or a zero for the exercise or
examination, or assign an ‘F’ in the course. (29)
Students submitting any fraudulent work—copied, plagiarized, stolen,
bought, cheated, etc.—will receive a ZERO for the assignment, and may
receive an F for the course.
An important clarification: collaboration is not plagiarism. A person who
plagiarizes claims someone else's work for his or her own; people who
collaborate on a project claim that they have done the work together and
that the work they have done together is their own. You need not credit
collaborating colleagues if they proofread, critique, or make suggestions on
your work.
E-mail: Treat e-mail professionally.
- I check my e-mail once daily on weekdays during the semester.
- All e-mails must be:
- polite and professional.
- well-spelled and grammatically correct.
- brief.
- You may e-mail me to:
- request an extension (at least one class period before the
assignment is due).
- make an appointment with me.
- ask about thesis statements or paper topics.
- request recommendation letters.
- hand in an assignment (with permission).
- I will not respond to e-mails regarding:
- grades or comments on your papers. (Come to my office to
discuss these issues.)
- missed assignments or notes. (Ask your classmates and / or
check the schedule.)
- technical support. (Call the technical support folks at
extension 7777.)
- questions on assignments, material covered in class,
grammar, or citation formats. (Ask in class, so that you get
credit for it and everyone gets the answer.)
- complaints of any sort.
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This original version of this page was created on December 30, 2001
for English 249s at the University of Connecticut.
Modified for English 3107 at Tennessee State
University, January 8, 2008. Modified for 3105 on August 19, 2008.
Latest update, Septemer 8, 2008.