Linking engineering students in Spain and technical writing students in the US as co-authors: The challenges and outcomes of subject-matter experts and language specialists collaborating internationally
Visualitza/Obre
Estadístiques de LA Referencia / Recolecta
Inclou dades d'ús des de 2022
Cita com:
hdl:2117/23065
Tipus de documentArticle
Data publicació2013-09-02
Condicions d'accésAccés obert
Llevat que s'hi indiqui el contrari, els
continguts d'aquesta obra estan subjectes a la llicència de Creative Commons
:
Reconeixement-NoComercial-SenseObraDerivada 3.0 Espanya
Abstract
In a first-of-its-kind international collaboration, technical writing classes in Spain and the US matched engineering students with international technical writing students to coauthor procedural instructions. These were then tested for usability by students in Finland and the US, and subsequently translated and localized by students in Belgium, France, and Italy. The coauthors faced challenges in gaining expertise, communicating clearly in a lingua franca, handling differing cultures, testing for usability, and managing differing semester schedules and time zones. Insights from these experiences yield recommendations for instructors who wish to replicate such collaborations.
CitacióMaylath, B.; King, T.; Arno, E. Linking engineering students in Spain and technical writing students in the US as co-authors: The challenges and outcomes of subject-matter experts and language specialists collaborating internationally. "Connexions. International Professional Communication Journal", 02 Setembre 2013, vol. 1, núm. 2, p. 159-185.
ISSN2325-6044
Versió de l'editorhttp://connexionsjournal.org/journal-issues/1-2/
Fitxers | Descripció | Mida | Format | Visualitza |
---|---|---|---|---|
maylath_king_arno-macia.pdf | 220,3Kb | Visualitza/Obre |