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Showing all 4 results
Moore, Patrick – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2008
Some struggles for prestige in academic technical communication are self-defeating and wasteful because of the clash between the material (or positive-sum) economy of the workplace and the positional (or zero-sum) economy of the academy. Some professors of technical communication create disrespect for themselves and their specialties because they…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, Reputation, Employees, Public Opinion
Moore, Patrick – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2006
One way to resolve some of the conflict in English studies and technical communication over their diminishing cultural capital is to recognize the place of instrumental discourse in communication studies. Instrumental discourse is individually verified social agreements to coordinate and control physical actions. One purpose of literary works is…
Descriptors: Social Justice, Technical Writing, Social Influences, Discourse Analysis
Moore, Patrick – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2006
Carolyn Miller's oft-cited "Humanistic Rationale for Technical Writing," published in 1979, tries to give technical communication faculty more cultural capital in English departments controlled by literature professors. Miller replaces a positivistic emphasis in technical communication pedagogy with rhetoric. She shows how technical knowledge is…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, English Departments, Cultural Capital, Intellectual Disciplines
Peer reviewedMoore, Patrick; Fitz, Chad – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 1993
Offers a brief overview of Gestalt theory. Shows how six Gestalt principles (proximity, closure, symmetry, figure-ground segregation, good continuation, and similarity) can be applied to improve a reader's comprehension of a badly designed instruction module that uses several graphics. (SR)
Descriptors: Graphic Arts, Higher Education, Instructional Design, Technical Illustration

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