Professor Blain: DBlain@citytech.cuny.edu
Asynchronous – no set class meetings
Conference Hours: T 1-2pm, W 4-5pm, or by appointment
Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/6132626816
Meeting ID: 613 262 6816
Course Site: https://openlab.citytech.cuny.edu/groups/eng2575-technical-writing-sp2022/
Perusall code: BLAIN-9Y6MR
Slack invitation: https://join.slack.com/t/citytech-bdx8903/shared_invite/zt-10fnbwpus-hj7ahAJuTHFToO29Thg08Q
Course Description:
An advanced course in effective technical writing techniques, including traditional technical writing forms and internet communication. This course will have students use electronic media such as Internet, presentation, and graphics programs to communicate technical and scientific information to a variety of audiences via written and oral presentations. Students will also analyze readings in science and technology, study technical writing models, and practice collaborative research and presentation. Building on previous writing courses, this course will reinforce clarity of thinking and expression in effective and correct English.
Course Objectives:
Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to:
- Communicate clearly in technical writing and in oral presentations.
- Use, develop, and evaluate technical documents.
- Gather, interpret, evaluate, and apply information from a variety of sources.
- Use professional tools for technical communication, inquiry, analysis, and collaboration.
Required Textbook (this and all readings are available on the course Perusall site):
Gross, A., Hamlin, A., Merck, B., Rubio, C. Nass, J., Savage, M., Desilva, M. (2019) Technical Writing. Retrieved from https://openoregon.pressbooks.pub/technicalwriting/. CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
Required Resources
- Access to your campus email account. Use it to create an account on openlab.citytech.cuny.edu during the first week. Join our class on OpenLab.
- Software: Office suite of applications capable of producing files in DOCX, PPTX, and PDF formats.
- Accepted invitation to Slack workspace.
- Join Perusall. BLAIN-V9RMC
Assignments and Course Grades
Project 1: Summary of Scientific or Technical Article | Using the libraryâs journals and scholarly databases, find a scientific or technical article from a peer-reviewed journal, and write a 500-word summary of the article using APA style, to be used as part of your teamâs project and report. | 10% |
Project 2: Expanded Definition of a Technical or Scientific Term | Choose a technical or scientific term that is important to your teamâs project, and write a 750-1000 word expanded definition of it to be incorporated into your teamâs project. Your expanded definition must be supported by scholarly or vetted sources that are properly quoted and cited using APA style. | 15% |
Project 3: Instruction Manual | Create a 1500-2000 word instruction manual that combines words, images, and design principles to help others accomplish a task. | 15% |
Project 4: Collaborative Final Project | After forming into teams of students, identify a problem and create these solution-oriented deliverables: a 4000-6000-word analytical research report on the problem, a website describing that problem and promoting your teamâs solution to the problem, and a presentation directed at a specific audience and designed to convince them to adopt your solution. As a collaborative project, all team members are expected to contribute equally based on a distribution of responsibilities managed within the team. | 40% |
Individual Collaboration Report | At the end of the course, youâll create a private email to send to the instructor giving your overall Reflection about the course and the team project — this will include a Team Evaluation sheet for you to complete and attach to the Reflection email. | 10% |
Participation | Posting assignments in a timely fashion, being an involved member of a team, communicating with the instructor before or as situations arise. Also includes your teamâs evaluation of your contribution. | 10% |
Total | 100% |
Prof Blain’s policies
Grading Policy
This is pretty straightforward: the percentages are listed above. Note, however, that you have an opportunity, and are encouraged, to do revisions to improve your initial grades once you get feedback from me and/or your classmates. Those final revisions are due on the last day of classes, May 23. I will not accept anything after May 23.
The Grade Book is built into OpenLab, and you can find it on the right-hand side of the site.
Participation & Attendance
This is, well, tricky since weâre asynchronous and donât have meeting times. Given thatâs the case, this is really a Participation grade, and thatâs mostly going to show up in each member of your teamâs Individual Collaboration Report. If youâre having trouble, get in touch with me immediately as well as your team project manager so your project team wonât be hung out to dry.
Required Format for Papers
While there will be exceptions that we will discuss in class, all writing submitted online via our class Google Drive and should follow APA professional style. It should always include a âname blockâ in the upper left corner, a title centered, and your work done in the format required by each assignment. If you quote or cite writing by others, it should be properly cited and included as an entry on a concluding âWorks Citedâ list. Search Google for âPurdue OWL APAâ for guidelines and sample papers.
Late Papers
Just donât. The penalties will be pretty severe, including a 10-point reduction from me for every day itâs late, as well as the wrath of your Teammates for throwing the project schedule off; youâll set policies as a team about how to handle these things.
A final word from me
Itâs interesting â some students hate asynchronous classes while others love them. No commuting, donât have to sit in a classroom, can set your own schedule (more or less). But in any case, it can be a real time management challenge. So set up your work system as soon as you can: one way is to write down all the deadlines on a calendar, adding your other classes and responsibilities, and then set up specific times to work on the class materials. That gets a little challenging once you start working in teams, but I have help for that.
Itâs a lot to think about!
On top of that, things happen. Life happens. The best laid plans almost always fall apart at some point.
So the most important thing is to stay in touch â with me, with your team. Iâm here to help as long as you do stay in touch via Slack or email. Iâm willing to work with whatever issue has come up just as long as I know about it ahead of time (more or less). So keep communicating!
Weâre all here to help each other succeed, and weâll do our best go help you through it. If you stick with it and really commit to the process, it can be a lot of fun along with a lot of work.
University Policies
Accessibility Statement
City Tech is committed to supporting the educational goals of enrolled students with disabilities in the areas of enrollment, academic advisement, tutoring, assistive technologies and testing accommodations. If you have or think you may have a disability, you may be eligible for reasonable accommodations or academic adjustments as provided under applicable federal, state and city laws. You may also request services for temporary conditions or medical issues under certain circumstances. If you have questions about your eligibility or would like to seek accommodation services or academic adjustments, please contact the Center for Student Accessibility at 300 Jay Street room L-237, 718 260 5143 or http://www.citytech.cuny.edu/accessibility/.
Academic Integrity and Plagiarism Statement
Students and all others who work with information, ideas, texts, images, music, inventions, and other intellectual property owe their audience and sources accuracy and honesty in using, crediting, and citing sources. As a community of intellectual and professional workers, the College recognizes its responsibility for providing instruction in information literacy and
academic integrity, offering models of good practice, and responding vigilantly and appropriately to infractions of academic integrity. Accordingly, academic dishonesty is prohibited at New York City College of Technology and is punishable by penalties, including failing grades, suspension, and expulsion. In the Resources tab on our OpenLab site, youâll find an Academic Integrity Pledge which the College would like you to read.
Sanctions for Academic Integrity Violations
In accordance with the CUNY Policy on Academic Integrity, NYCCT empowers its Academic Integrity Committee and Academic Integrity Officer to process violations of the CUNY Academic Integrity Policy. As stated in the student handbook, all instructors must report all instances of academic dishonesty to the Academic Integrity Officer.
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