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E-raamat: Designing Web-Based Applications for 21st Century Writing Classrooms

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Designing Web-Based Applications for 21st Century Writing Classrooms brings together, for the first time, a group of scholars and teachers who have been developing, on their own initiative, web-based solutions to technical and professional writing instructional problems. In industry the perennial question is whether to buy or build, but in academia, for various reasons, buy is rarely an option. Individual faculty members do not have the money to pay for software solutions, and often their interests are too local or small-scale to warrant institutional-level involvement. In addition, the design of commercial applications from vendors typically does not take into account the unique needs and considerations of teachers of writing and often reflects a design ideology quite different from theirs. This is why so many writing teachers have turned to open source solutions and, in the process of learning how to tweak them to make them more responsive to their specific needs, why so many of these teachers have developed programming and design skills. Beyond exigency, the motivation for becoming proficient at interface and database design comes from the observation that the nature of writing is changing dramatically. Text is no longer an object. It has become a place of interaction; consumers are becoming producers. And the work of technical and professional communication, indeed the work of writing teachers more generally, is becoming increasingly involved in the design and implementation of places of interaction. Words have become data; texts are becoming communities.Intended Audience: Teachers and scholars of writing and computers, compositionists, and technical and professional writers.

The contributors discuss how professors of technical and professional writing have created or modified existing software to accommodate the needs of 21st century learners and suggest that "do-it-yourself" is an appropriate response to technical innovation because, in the time of internets, words are data and texts are communities.
Introduction 1(6)
George Pullman
Baotong Gu
PART 1 Writing Environments
7(86)
Chapter 1 Theorizing and Building Online Writing Environments: User-Centered Design Beyond the Interface
7(12)
Michael McLeod
William Hart-Davidson
Jeffrey Grabill
Chapter 2 <emma>: An Electronic Writing Space
19(18)
Ron Balthazor
Christy Desmet
Alexis Hart
Sara Steger
Robin Wharton
Chapter 3 Redevelop, Redesign, and Refine: Expanding the Functionality and Scope of TTOPIC into Raider Writer
37(14)
Robert Hudson
Susan M. Lang
Chapter 4 The Role of Metaphor in the Development of an Instructional Writing Environment
51(18)
Mike Palmquist
Chapter 5 Creating Complex Web-Based Applications with Agile Techniques: Iterations as Drafts
69(24)
Matt Penniman
Michael Wojcik
PART 2 Individual, Standalone Applications
93(82)
Chapter 6 Visualizing Knowledge Work with Google Wave
93(14)
Brian J. McNely
Paul Gestwicki
Chapter 7 Students Playing as Scholars and Selves: Academic Synthesis as Conversation Game
107(18)
David Fisher
Joe Williams
Chapter 8 Designing, Implementing, and Evaluating a Web-Based Instructional Application for Technical Communication Classes
125(16)
David Chapman
Chapter 9 Supplementing a Professional Writing Course with an Interactive Self-Learning Document Design Tutorial
141(14)
Suguru Ishizaki
Stacie Rohrbach
Laura Scott
Chapter 10 Developing a Web-Served Handbook for Writers
155(20)
Stephen A. Bernhardt
PART 3 Open-Source Modifications
175(66)
Chapter 11 Peersourcing the PIT Journal: The Technosocial Pedagogical Hooks and Layers of Collaborative Publishing
175(20)
The PIT Core Publishing Collective
Chapter 12 Blogs as an Alternative to Course Management Systems: Public, Interactive Teaching with a Round Peg in a Square Hole
195(16)
Steven D. Krause
Chapter 13 Developing a Course Wiki for Accessibility and Sustainability
211(20)
Karl Stolley
Chapter 14 An Interface for Interaction Design: Using Course Wikis to Build Knowledge Communities
231(10)
Steven T. Benninghoff
Contributors 241(6)
Index 247
Pullman, George; Baotong, Gu