1st Edition

Exploding Technical Communication Workplace Literacy Hierarchies and Their Implications for Literacy Sponsorship

By Remley Dirk, Charles Sides Copyright 2014
186 Pages
by Routledge

186 Pages
by Routledge

186 Pages
by Routledge

Within the framework of New Literacy Studies, Dirk Remley presents a historical study of how technical communication practices at a World War II arsenal sponsored literacy within the community in which it operated from 1940 to 1960 and contemporary implications of similar forms of sponsorship. The Training within Industry (TWI) methods developed by the U.S. government and industry at that time... Read more

Acknowledgments

 CHAPTER 1. Introduction

 CHAPTER 2. Methodology and Issues in Historical Research

 CHAPTER 3. Historical Context

 CHAPTER 4. Training Within Industry: Sponsored Multimodal Technical Communication

 CHAPTER 5. Training Practices, the Accident, and Sponsorship Implications

 CHAPTER 6. Other Literacies at Work

 CHAPTER 7. Literacy in the Community and Home

 CHAPTER 8. Current Applications of Training Within Industry: Continued Sponsorship of Technical Communication

 CHAPTER 9. Workplace Communication and Implications of Sponsorship

References

Index

Biography

Dirk Remley has taught business writing and technical writing courses for over 20 years at Kent State University, where he also earned a PhD in rhetoric and composition. His publications pertain to literacy practices and writing pedagogies, particularly those connected to workplace communication. He has published work in the Community Literacy Journal, Across the Disciplines, Computers and Composition Online, Computers and Composition, and Writing and Pedagogy, in addition to multiple handbook chapters. He has also made presentations at numerous national conferences.