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E-raamat: Lean Technical Communication: Toward Sustainable Program Innovation [Taylor & Francis e-raamat]

(University of South Florida), (Purdue University), (Miami University of Ohio)
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Teised raamatud teemal:
Winner of the 2020 CCCC Research Impact Award

Lean Technical Communication: Toward Sustainable Program Innovation offers a theoretically and empirically-grounded model for growing and stewarding professional and technical communication programs under diverse conditions. Through case studies of disruptive innovations, this book presents a forward-looking, sustainable vision of program administration that negotiates short-term resource deficits with long-term resilience. It illustrates how to meet many of the newest challenges facing technical communication programs, such as building and maintaining change with limited resources, economic shortfalls, technology deficits, and expanding/reimagining the role of our programs in the 21st century university. Its insights benefit those involved in the development of undergraduate and graduate programs, including majors, service courses, minors, specializations, and certificates.
List of Figures and Tables
xiii
Preface xv
Acknowledgments xxi
PART ONE
1(56)
1 Toward Sustainable Program Innovation
3(14)
Terms Key to Our Inquiry into Programmatic Work: Disruption, Resilience, Sustainability, and Innovation
6(7)
Disruption
6(2)
Resilience and Sustainability
8(1)
Innovation
9(4)
On Modeling a Lean Technical Communication Program: The Book's Plan
13(4)
2 A Model of Lean Technical Communication
17(20)
Seven Tenets of Lean Technical Communication
18(12)
Value Not Deficit
18(1)
Innovates and Disrupts
19(2)
Rooted in Local Needs and Aims at Social Responsibility
21(2)
Regulates Cost
23(4)
Engages Sustainability
27(1)
Promotes Efficiency
28(1)
Enhances Visibility
29(1)
Tenets and Tensions: Four Continuums That Frame Programmatic Practices
30(7)
Standardization/Flexibility
31(1)
Discipline/Department
32(2)
Global/Local
34(1)
Dependency/Autonomy
35(2)
3 On Crafting Lean Change That Endures
37(20)
Relationships and Pathways for Lean Programmatic Work
39(3)
Boundary Work as Making
40(1)
Stewardship as Maintaining
41(1)
Expand or Face Cuts: A Hypothetical Scenario
42(7)
Narrative
42(3)
Analysis: Lean Goals and Pathways at Work in the Video Option
45(4)
Heuristics for Enacting, Maintaining, and Assessing Lean Change
49(8)
PART TWO
57(74)
4 Program Classifications, Standards, and Funding Models: An On-the-Ground Case
59(20)
Florida's Performance Based Funding Infrastructure
60(3)
Classifications and Standards as Sites of Resistance
63(4)
Boundary Objects in the Florida Funding Ecology
67(4)
Programs of Strategic Emphasis
68(3)
Critical Interventions Through Boundary Objects
71(8)
Lean Futures
73(6)
5 Program Facilities and Sustainable Computing Infrastructures: An On-the-Ground Case
79(14)
Environmental Impacts of IT
81(1)
Sustainable Computing Infrastructure as Boundary Infrastructure
82(5)
Standardization/Flexibility
82(2)
Dependency/Autonomy
84(2)
Discipline/Department
86(1)
Global/Local
86(1)
Lean Futures
87(6)
Assessing Lean Facilities
89(4)
6 Developing Lean and Sustainable Pedagogy for Sustainable Communities: An On-the-Ground Case
93(28)
Planning Community-Based Projects: Intersecting Considerations for Sustainable Pedagogy
96(6)
Lean and Sustainable Pedagogy in the Technical Communication Classroom: Two Projects
102(17)
Project 1 Writing for the Public
103(4)
Project 2 Usability and UX
107(5)
Talking Assessment
112(7)
Conclusion: Implications of Lean and Sustainable Pedagogies
119(2)
7 By Way of Conclusion: Toward a Lean and Sustainable Future
121(10)
Goals of Lean Technical Communication
122(1)
Lean Innovation and Emerging Technologies
123(1)
Lean Curricular Structures
124(3)
Lean Sustainability
127(1)
Concluding Thoughts
128(3)
References 131(20)
Index 151
Meredith A. Johnson is Associate Professor and Director of the graduate program in Rhetoric and Composition at the University of South Florida where she previously served as the interim director of Professional Writing, Rhetoric, and Technology. She received her Ph.D. in Rhetoric and Composition from Purdue University. Her research appears in journals such as Technical Communication, Technical Communication Quarterly, Computers and Composition: An International Journal, Computers and Composition Online, IEEE: Transactions on Professional Communication, Kairos: A Journal of Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy, and enculturation.

W. Michele Simmons is Associate Professor of English, faculty affiliate with the Institute for the Environment and Sustainability, and Director of Professional Writing at Miami University. Her research lies at the intersections of civic engagement, research methodologies, user experience, and institutional change. Her publications include Participation and Power: Civic Discourse in Environmental Policy and her research appears in journals such as Technical Communication Quarterly, College Composition and Communication, and The Writing Instructor.

Patricia Sullivan is a Professor and Director of the graduate program in Rhetoric and Composition at Purdue University where she previously directed Technical Writing. Recently she has published on emerging technologies, institutional change, mentoring, research methodologies, rhetorical theory, video, and usability/UX.