TY - BOOK ED - Open Textbook Library ED - Department of English, Linguistics, and Writing Studies TI - Technical Writing @ SLCC T2 - Open textbook library AV - PE1408 PB - Open Textbook Library KW - Humanities KW - Textbooks KW - Rhetoric KW - Academic achievement N1 - I. The Writing Process -- II. Introduction to Writing in the Sciences -- III. Introduction to Writing in Engineering -- IV. Citation & Copyright -- V. Civic-Engagement and Technical Writing -- VI. Project Planning N2 - What is technical writing? You can think of it as writing about specialized topics or you could also think of it as using technology to communicate your ideas. A science lab report, a specification, a change order for building construction, or patient education materials-just to name a few-are all considered technical writing. Similarly if you design a webpage or a brochure this can also be considered technical writing. Academic writing, the writing you do for school, generally is informative or persuasive writing and usually only comes in a few different genres. In technical writing, on the other hand, one is often documenting what was done (such as a science experiment or auto repair invoice). Therefore the format of the writing is often as important as the content. This leads to an emphasis on usability and accessibility for your documents. Finally, although citing your sources is important in all writing, you will find that in some fields of technical writing, such as the sciences and engineering, it is one of the more important considerations of your writing UR - https://open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/textbooks/924 ER -