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Dorpenyo, Isidore Kafui – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2015
This article analyzes a proposal submitted to a funding unit in Michigan Technological University by a PhD Forestry student. A rhetorical-cultural approach of the text provides evidence to argue that scientific writing is rooted in a cultural practice that valorizes certain kinds of thought, practices, rituals, and symbols; that a scientist's work…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Forestry, Cultural Influences, Scientists
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Gallagher, Jamey – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2010
Effective writing happens when the values of a genre and the desires of a writer match. Studying the blog entry as a genre has strengthened the author's assumptions about the possibility of using blogs as examples of emplaced, agency-granting writing and as bridges to academic writing. Because blogs are a relatively new form of communication, the…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Writing (Composition), Electronic Publishing, Computer Mediated Communication
Ornatowski, Cezar M. – Writing Instructor, 2007
Until recently, the notion of a "rhetoric of science" may have sounded oxymoronic. Traditional conceptions of science as the embodiment of disinterested, objective knowledge of nature, coupled with perceptions of rhetoric as empty verbiage, subterfuge, or stylistic embellishment, made science and rhetoric appear quite incompatible. However, recent…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Rhetoric, Scientific Principles, Epistemology
Riley, Kathryn – Technical Writing Teacher, 1988
Reviews distinctions between negative and positive letters and summarizes the advice commonly offered for conveying negative messages. Outlines the tenets of Grice's theory of conversational implicature, and discusses sociolinguistic explanations for the use of indirectness in negative messages. Analyzes the texts of several letters, using Grice's…
Descriptors: Business Correspondence, Discourse Analysis, Language Usage, Pragmatics
Young, Art – Technical Writing Teacher, 1977
Discusses rhetorical theory and how it can be applied to technical writing. (HOD)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Language Styles, Language Usage, Rhetoric
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Connor, Jennifer J. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1994
Examines self-help medical literature in 19th-century Canada. Shows that while authors repeatedly called for "plain" language in contrast to mysterious terminology employed by medical practitioners, comparison of their style with that of medical textbook authors reveals few real differences. Concludes that the posture adopted by Canadian…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Language Usage, Nineteenth Century Literature
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Dombrowski, Paul M. – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2002
Outlines Willard Van Orman Quine's theory of language in the generation of empirical knowledge, gleaned from two works from his voluminous ouvre. Draws connections between Quine's theory and that of Richard Rorty, the American pragmatist philosopher. Sketches how this theoretical perspective can be applied in the technical communication classroom…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Constructivism (Learning), Higher Education, Language Usage
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Simmons, W. Michele; Grabill, Jeffrey T. – Technical Communication Quarterly, 1998
Builds on arguments in risk communication that the predominant linear risk-communication models are problematic for their failure to consider audience and additional contextual issues. Argues that "risk" is socially constructed. Argues for an approach that involves the public in fundamental ways at the earliest stages of the…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Communication Problems, Context Effect, Higher Education
Burns, Shannon; And Others – 1976
Designed as a research tool for teachers of writing, this annotated bibliography describes texts and readers which pertain to college level English courses (with indications of those suitable for use in high schools). Each entry has been placed in one or more of the following categories: grammar and basic usage, composition, advanced composition…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Grammar, Higher Education, Language Usage