copyright – Technical Writing http://3764f14.tracigardner.com English 3764 @ Virginia Tech – Fall 2014 Wed, 17 Dec 2014 09:19:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.3 Graphics, Instructions, and Definitions http://3764f14.tracigardner.com/graphics-instructions-and-definitions/ Wed, 05 Nov 2014 06:44:54 +0000 http://3764f14.tracigardner.com/?p=157 Read more →

]]>
This is the post for the November 6, 2014 class meeting.

There are lots of resources to share today, and you’ll post several times in the forums and send me an email message. Let’s get to it.

Class Work for November 6

These are the tasks to complete for today’s work:

  • Look at some resources for choosing and using graphics.
  • Go over some information on instructions and definitions.
  • Discuss some examples in the forums.

Choosing and Using Graphics

You can find tips for adding graphics to your documents on the FAQ site. Most importantly, know that unless you take the photo yourself, you need to be sure that it’s okay to use it in your writing. In the workplace, you will frequently have staff who curate photo collections you can use if you need to illustrate a document. For our purposes, however, you have to think about issues like copyright and citing your sources.

Work through these FAQs for details and resources, including places to find images that you can use freely (as long as you credit your source):

Writing Instructions and Definitions

I pointed out the key information from the textbook in the last post. Today I have some slideshow presentations that review the information from the text and add some details that help you as you work on your project:

  1. The Writing Instructions slideshow includes a List of Required Parts (all the things you need to include in your instructions). Check the last slide for Tips for Instructions (a list of things I sometimes see people struggle with).

  2. The Writing Definitions slideshow focuses on sentence and paragraph definitions, which you are likely to use if you create a glossary. Most glossary entries will be no more than a sentence or two. You will also find information on glossary format. If you are creating a glossary, pay particular attention to slides 11–14.

Discussing Example Instructions and Definitions

You will post two forum replies today, one for instructions and one for glossaries:

]]>