Chapter 3 explores how teams create documents, work together during meetings, and use social media to stay connected. You have surely worked as a team member on projects either for other classes or in a job or internship, so you are probably familiar with these ideas. While you will not collaborate on major projects in this course, you will work together during peer review and in discussion of the course readings and activities.
Using Digital Tools to Collaborate
Chapter 3 of Practical Strategies for Technical Communication discusses how social media and other electronic tools such as messaging technologies, wikis, and shared document workspaces can be useful for collaboration in the workplace. As a technical writer, you should learn how to use the comment, revision, and highlighting features of their word-processing software so that you can email files back and forth among team members.
For this course, you will use at least three different tools to collaborate with me and your classmates:
- Email to communicate with me.
- Annotation tools in Canvas to comment on one another’s projects.
- Discussion tools in Canvas to share your documents and discuss readings.
As you read Chapter 3, pay particular attention to the section on Discussion Boards (pp. 48–49). The tools discussed on those pages are similar to the online forums we will use in class, and you should follow the Guidelines in the textbook when you write on the forums.
Reading Quiz
After reading the chapter, complete the reading quiz in Canvas for Chapter 3.
Photo: Wendt WisCEL: students collaborating by college.library, on Flickr