• DocumentCode
    756160
  • Title

    What Technical and Scientific Communicators Do: A Comprehensive Model for Developing Academic Programs

  • Author

    Anderson, Paul V.

  • Volume
    27
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    1984
  • Firstpage
    160
  • Lastpage
    166
  • Abstract
    A growing number of colleges and universities are preparing programs to educate students for careers as technical and scientific communicators. The educators who design these new programs have three major resources to help them determine what their programs should look like: descriptions of existing programs; published articles that discuss program design in a general way; and advice from practicing professionals. Even when taken together, these resources do not provide educators with a completely satisfactory basis for designing programs. A more satisfactory resource is a model of what the profession does. This model consists of 1) a definition of the common professional aim of all practicing technical and scientific communicators, 2) an abstract¿and idealized¿description of the general activities that practicing communicators perform as they pursue that aim, and 3) a catalog of the major features of the contexts within which these communicators pursue their common aim. In this article, the model is presented and its application to program design is illustrated with two examples.
  • Keywords
    Back; Banking; Communication industry; Communications technology; Context modeling; Educational institutions; Engineering profession; Government; Professional communication; Societies;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Education, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9359
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TE.1984.4321691
  • Filename
    4321691