W321 12351 ADVANCED TECHNICAL WRITING
Dana Anderson
9:30a-10:20a D (25 students) 3 cr.
PREREQUISITE: W231 OR PERMISSION OF INSTRUCTOR.
TOPIC: “Visual Literacy and Document Design”
How does the design of a document—the material shaping of text on a
page—contribute to its effectiveness in achieving its purposes?
Likewise, how do poor design choices prevent documents from
accomplishing their aims? How are design elements such as page
layout, font, spacing, size, proximity, color, and contrast central
to our visual literacy—our ability to interpret, understand,
and make use of information based on how it is physically structured
for our reading?
These are the questions we’ll be exploring as we look at a range of
different documents, especially (but not limiting ourselves to)
those that we would call “professional writing”—reports, proposals,
process and procedure descriptions, brochures, announcements, online
documents such as web pages, and the like. In the computer
classroom where we’ll be meeting, we will learn about more than
essential concepts and theories of document design: we will learn
how design choices have very real, specific consequences,
rhetorical consequences, for how persuasive texts are in the
purposes they seek to accomplish. The working knowledge of document
design you’ll develop is one that is increasingly expected of people
who write in their various workplaces. To that end, your work will
provide you with a portfolio of texts that you’ve created to help
you demonstrate your abilities as both a writer and a designer of
professional documents.
We’ll be completing various short writing and design assignments, as
well as a semester project, which will likely be the writing and
design of a longer document needed by one of our many community
service organizations. Two of your major assignments will be group
projects, including your semester project and a class presentation
about it.
The course is intended to pick up where W231 (Professional Writing
Skills) concludes. Accordingly, completion of W231 or instructor
permission (and please contact me if you’re interested) is
required.