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The MIT guide to science and engineering communication

The MIT guide to science and engineering communication1997

James G. Paradis

About this book

Drawing on their considerable experience teaching both college students and science professionals, James Paradis and Muriel Zimmerman have written a handbook that treats four kinds of literacy - written, oral, graphic, electronic - as crucial and inseparable in science and engineering communication. The MIT Guide emphasizes processes and forms that will help in creating documents and includes numerous realistic examples. A special feature of the book is its acceptance of the fact that most work in science these days is collaborative and that writing is often a group rather than a solitary activity. There is also a strong emphasis on the central role of the computer in creating and disseminating technical materials.

Details

First published
1997
OL Work ID
OL3294475W

Subjects

Communication in engineeringTechnical writingCommunication in scienceLANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINESRhetoricREFERENCEWriting SkillsWetenschappelijk onderwijsTechnisch onderwijsComposition & Creative WritingSchrijfvaardigheidInformation scientifiqueCommunication en ingénierieRédaction techniquePhysical Sciences & MathematicsSciences - General

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.