I've been thinking about the research paper. The undergrad papers should be 2,500 words, graduate papers 3,250 (about 3 pages longer). Remember, I want it in HTML & posted on your site.
I'm not very happy with the material on online writing that's been published through traditional peer-reviewed journals (that you'd find in the MLA or JSTOR databases), so feel free to quote from good material that you find through Google. Do check out the author and the site to make sure that they know what they're talking about. Of the databases our library subscribes to, the best one of Technical Writing research that I have found is Proquest.
As for the criteria
sheet I have posted, I do want you to have a good thesis
and a solid outline. Also add evidence to your argument
- quotes, images, videos, etc.
The paper format should generally be MLA style.
That mainly applies to citation style (parenthetical citation)
and the MLA-style bibliography. I usually use Easybib.com to create
bibliographies.
As for how it looks on the screen, it should look nice
and be adaptive to the desktop and to mobile. You can
use the style of this page if you wish & personalize it
with your own color scheme, background image, & header
image. Or use the style of your own choosing.
I’ve added a sample of a responsive
paper here.
It’s a paper from an English 303 Techical Writing class, but
it’s a good example of a responsive paper. I’ve put
the html, images, and css into a
.zip file
if you want to use it
in writing your own paper. I’ve printed it out as a
.pdf
because
we sometimes do that with web pages. I use the following code:
<div style="page-break-after: always;"></div>
to create breaks where they need to be in the printout without affecting how they look on the computer. In the print.css file, I have a code that is supposed to keep the images from breaking across pages, but not that many browsers support the code yet.
Topics
Since the focus of the class is on the τέχνη
of online writing,
I generally would prefer papers to have pragmatic goals rather
than strictly academic ones. Most of online writing is
technical at least in the sense of format if not the
content. Tables, lists, page grids, pullouts, headings,
images, sounds, videos, links — many of these are things were
brought into HTML from technical writing and professional
publishing, while others go far beyond what could be done on
paper. I’ve been thinking about issues in online writing
and putting together some of the sources that I’ve been
able to find. My list may be helpful, so I’m including
it below:
Issues in Online
Technical Writing
- Accessibility
- Blair-Early, Adream, and Mike Zender. "User Interface Design Principles for Interaction Design." Design Issues 24 (Summer 2008): 85-107. Web. <http:// www.jstor.org/ stable/ 25224185>.
- Horton, Sarah. Access by Design. New York: New
Riders, 2005. Universal Usability: A Universal Design
Approach to Web Usability. 2006. Web. 15 Nov. 2014. <http://
www. universal usability.com/ access_by_ design/
index.html>. [USE FOR TEXT]
- Horton, Sarah, and Whitney Quesenbery. "Book Excerpt: A
Web for Everyone." UX Magazine. Design for
Experience, 7 Apr. 2014. Article no. 1216.
Web. 15 Nov. 2014. <http://
uxmag.com/ articles/ book-excerpt-a-web-for-everyone>.
Excerpt is about audience analysis in designing for
usability.
- Usability Guidelines. Usability.gov. <http:// guidelines. usability. gov/>.
- Methods
for developing a web site. Usability.gov. <http://
www. usability.gov/ how-to-and-tools/ methods/
index.html?>.
- Wuhcag: Making Accessibility Easy.
- WCAG (Web Content Accessibiliy Guidelines 2.0) Checklist.
- "WCAG and Accessibility with Luke McGrath." The Web Ahead.
- Age
- Designing
Web Sites for Older Adults. AARP Report. <http://
assets.aarp. org/ www.aarp. org_/articles /research/ oww/
AARP-50 Sites.pdf>.
- "Making
Your Website Senior Friendly." National Institute on
Aging. <http://
www.nia. nih.gov/ health/ publication/
making-your-website-senior-friendly>. pdf.
- Economics
- Gender
- Allen, Anita L. "Gender and Privacy in
Cyberspace." Stanford Law Review 52 (May
2000): 1175-1200. JSTOR <http://www.jstor.org/stable/1229512>.
- Race
- Kolko, Beth E., Lisa Nakamura; Gilbert B. Rodman.
"The Internet: Creating Equity through Continuous Education
or Perpetuating a Digital Divide?" Comparative Education
Review 47 (February 2003): 112-133. JSTOR
<http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/373959>.
Digital divide in the African-American community
- Nationality & Language
- Ono, Hiroshi, and Madeline Zavodny. "Immigrants, English Ability, and the Digital Divide." Social Forces 86 (June 2008): 1455-1479. JSTOR <http:// www.jstor.org/ stable/ 20430817>.
- Privacy
- Spam
I think a good topic would be one that you already have a
connection to. For instance, at least one person in our
class used to be on the staff at The Tech Talk.
I notice that the paper underwent an online upgrade in
November 2011. This upgrade would make a good paper
topic. It would involve using the reporter skills of
interviewing.
- Who decided the paper needed a facelift? Who
selected Donnie
Bell to create the new site?
- How was the process carried out between Bell and the journalism dept? Was there one person who communicated with him, or did he interact with a committee?
- How was WordPress chosen as the CMS (Content Management
System)? How was this particular template
chosen? How was it modified to make it unique to Tech?
- Was the Tech Web team involved with the process? How?
- What server is the paper physically located on? How
was it set up to allow WordPress to run on it?
- Why was the decision made for the site not to be adaptive?
- Who updates the web site? All the writers? The
editor? Is the same article streamed to go to both the
press and the web site so that it only has to be processed
once?
- And why doesn't the site show up on Google? Are
you kidding me? Like Winston Smith, I
understand how; I just don't understand why. Here's
the how: believe it or not, it really is Evil
Robots. But why do we want one of our public faces to
be invisible online? This is the flip side of the
customary SEO (Search Engine Optimization) that seeks to
draw traffic to your site.
Notice that this as a paper would be laying a foundation for
your later work designing websites. How will you
get the nod to design a web site? What templates will
you draw on? What hardware will your site run on?
Who will set that up? How can you draw attention to your
site? A year after going online, my Louisiana Anthology is not
only the number 1 item in a Google
search; out of 8 items listed on the first page of
results, 4 lead to my Anthology. Booyah!
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