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ICS 139W Critical Writing on Information Technology

ICS 139W Critical Writing on Information Technology. Lecture 1 Emily Navarro Duplication of course material for any commercial purpose without the explicit written permission of the professor is prohibited. Today’s Lecture. Course introduction “System change” assignment overview

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ICS 139W Critical Writing on Information Technology

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  1. ICS 139WCritical Writing on Information Technology Lecture 1 Emily Navarro Duplication of course material for any commercial purpose without the explicit written permission of the professor is prohibited

  2. Today’s Lecture • Course introduction • “System change” assignment overview • “Writing instructions” assignment overview

  3. Course Introduction

  4. Course Basics • Course: ICS 139W – Critical Writing on Information Technology • Professor: Emily Navarro (emilyo@uci.edu) • TA: Scott Godfrey (sgodfrey@uci.edu) • Lecture: T Th 5-6:20pm, ICS 180 • Discussion: W 9-9:50 (ICS 259), 10-10:50 (DBH 1423) (attend one per week) • Some weeks: required activities • Some weeks: informal consultation hour • Course Website: http://www.ics.uci.edu/~emilyo/teaching/ics139ws2014/index.html

  5. Course Basics (II) • Office hours • Emily: before or after lecture, by appointment • Scott: before or after discussion, by appointment • Questions and announcements • Email or in class • Class email list • Course materials • English dictionary and thesaurus • A writing guide (see UCI Writing Center resources)

  6. Course Goals • To give you the opportunity to focus on writing in your specific academic discipline (CS) • To help you become comfortable writing technical documents for a variety of audiences • To help you become comfortable with giving presentations

  7. Grading • Writing Assignments: • "Writing Instructions:" 10% • "Influencing Policy:” 15% • "Changing the System Introductory Tutorial:" 15% • "Changing the System Proposal:" 20% • “Changing the System Promo Piece:” 5% • Resumé and cover letter: 5% • Two or three smaller in-class exercises: 10% • Class attendance and participation, including three or four oral presentations: 20% • Really good reason for absence, let me know beforehand • No exams

  8. Writing Assignment Requirements • Submission mechanics • Submit a hard copy at the BEGINNING of class • ALSO submit an electronic copy via EEE Dropbox • Intermediate versions • should be as good as you can make them • count for 1/3 of your grade on the assignment • must include marked copies of all earlier versions • both instructor marks and peer editing marks • refers to paper submission only

  9. Writing Assignment Requirements (II) • Plagiarism • DON’T DO IT! • Plagiarism = presenting someone else’s work as your own • Cite any resources from which you pull information • “Two or more” rule of thumb • All assignments are checked thoroughly for plagiarism • Plagiarism consequences • Fail the course • Offense recorded with Student Affairs

  10. Writing Assignment Requirements (III) • Grammatical/spelling mechanics • A good command of English syntax, spelling, and punctuation is assumed • Course focuses on content, organization, audience, and style • We will not mark every grammatical error on your assignments • But they can lower your grade • If you need help with this, the UCI Writing Center has many resources

  11. Spelling/Grammar Checkers • Spell check will not fined words witch are miss used butt spelled rite! • Marketing are bad for brand big and small. You Know What I am Saying? It is no wondering that advertisings are bad for company in America, Chicago and Germany. ... McDonald's and Coca Cola are good brand. ... Gates do good marketing job in Microsoft.

  12. Spelling/Grammar Checkers • Spell check will not fined words witch are miss used butt spelled rite! • Marketing are bad for brand big and small. You Know What I am Saying? It is no wondering that advertisings are bad for company in America, Chicago and Germany. ... McDonald's and Coca Cola are good brand. ... Gates do good marketing job in Microsoft. Passes MS Word’s grammar checker!

  13. Writing Assignment Requirements (IV) • Counting words and pages • one page = one standard, double-spaced typewritten page; ~300 words, 10-12 point font • Typography: All papers must be • Typewritten • Double-spaced • Except for • Influencing Policy letter final version • Change proposal cover letter

  14. Writing Assignment Requirements (V) • Binding • Smaller assignments: one staple in upper left corner • Larger assignments (that include previous drafts): one large paper clip or purse clip • Include your name on each piece • For more details see “Writing Assignment Requirements” linked off the class Website

  15. “System Change” Assignment

  16. Basic Idea • Examine some software system you are familiar with from a variety of perspectives: • Introducing new users to the system • Proposing changes to the system • Promoting the changed system to its users • You will create documents and oral presentations for each of these purposes • Focus on the different audiences • and how your writing/presenting needs to be tailored to each

  17. Stage I – Choosing a System • Can be conventional application software or a Website with complex navigation/interaction/functionality • Audience: our class • Deliverables: • 4/3: Email to Scott • Name the system • Describe it if unfamiliar • Sketch out the changes you are proposing • 4/10: 1-2 minute oral presentation in lecture • Based on feedback from Scott

  18. Stage II – Introduction for Novices • Write an introduction to the system for novices • 3-4 pages • High-level description of the system, its capabilities, tasks it performs • Include any necessary background information • Do not include tedious minor details • E.g., which keys to press, which menu items to choose • Audience: novices • Deliverables: • 4/16: First draft • 4/17 or 4/21: 2-minute oral version of introduction • 4/23: Final version

  19. Stage III – Proposal for Change • Write a proposal for changing the system • 5-6 pages plus a single-page cover letter • Address the proposal to whoever is in charge of making the changes happen • Produce a proposal that is actually “sendable” to this person • Audience: decision-makers • Deliverables: • 4/24: First draft for joint editing in class + presentation slides • 5/1: Revision of proposal and slides based on joint editing • 5/15, 5/20, 5/22: Final oral proposal for change (~4 min.) • 5/20: Final written version + final presentation slides

  20. Stage IV – Promotion for Users • Prepare a one-page promotion piece announcing, describing, and promoting your change to current users • Flyer, brochure, memo, Web page, etc. • Can be relatively informal • Audience: current users of the system • Deliverables: • 5/29: Draft for editing in class • 6/3: Final version + 2- minute presentation

  21. Suggestions/Advice • Choose software that you know/care about • Be mindful of your audience • Use graphics effectively • Cite your sources of information • For oral portions, do not simply read from a script • Seek advice from us • Oral presentation graded on preparedness (not speaking style, nervousness, etc.)

  22. “Writing Instructions” Assignment

  23. Basic Idea • The premise • We are used to writing instructions for computers • Writing instructions for human execution requires a different set of skills • The assignment • Build some object using 20-30 Legos, Tinkertoys, etc. • Premade “kits” not allowed • Write a manual for building your object using only words (no pictures) • Build each other’s objects in class using only the written manual

  24. Due Dates • 4/9 • Disassembled components of your object and three copies of a good draft of your manual • You will build each others’ objects in class and make suggestions for improvements to each others’ manuals • 4/15 • Final revision of your manual • Disassembled components

  25. Suggestions and Hints • Start your manual with a list of components • Consider describing your object in terms of modules • Use organizational guides in your manual • e.g., section headers, table of contents

  26. Next Time • Discussion (tomorrow) • Consultation hour for “Changing System” and “Writing Instructions” assignments • Lecture (Thursday) • In-class writing sample • “Easy” topic • ~300 words • You may bring a dictionary or other reference work on paper • Strive for perfect mechanics, grammar, usage, clarity, organization • Bring a pencil or two

  27. Next, Next Time • Lecture (Tuesday) • Read the two papers on PowerPoint available on the course Website • You will write about them in class

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