Austin Community College
Spring 2008 - OPEN COURSES

Course Descriptions All Courses Classroom Courses Distance Learning Courses

Updated: 06/12/2008 15:25:35


BUSINESS AND TECHNICAL COMMUNICATIONS

CLASSROOM 
16 Week Session January 14 - May 11
ETWR 1372 Grammar/Style

E+	[12/5]	11837	Lec	002	NRG	4209	MW	 5:40pm -  6:55pm	OH Crocker, Amanda
ENGL 2311 Technical & Business Writing
E+	[12/9]	11679	Lec	001	CYP	1105	W	 7:05pm -  9:45pm	OH Klau, Robert
E+	[6/12]	11680	Lec	002	NRG	4209	MW	10:35am - 11:50am	OH Pruett, David
E+	[11/12]	11682	Lec	004	NRG	4209	MW	12:00pm -  1:15pm	OH Klau, Robert
E+	[11/12]	11684	Lec	006	NRG	4209	MW	 2:50pm -  4:05pm	OH Klau, Robert
E+	[12/6]	11685	Lec	007	NRG	4209	S	 9:00am - 11:40am	OH Barkley, Roy
E+	[8/12]	14755	Lec	009	NRG	4209	TTh	 1:25pm -  2:40pm	OH Mogull, Scott


8 Week Session March 17 - May 11
ETWR 1376 Grant Proposals and Business Plans
E+	[12/6]	11840	Lec	001	RGC	229	TTh	 5:40pm -  8:10pm	OH Mejia-Dietche, Ana


DISTANCE LEARNING 
16 Week Session January 14 - May 11
ETWR 1372 Grammar/Style
E+	[7/12]	11836	OPC	001	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH Reed, Mindy
11836 - Internet access required. M. Reed, 907.1821, MANDATORY: email mreed@austincc.edu 
for information during 1st class week. Syllabus at www.io.com/~tcm/etwr1372/etwr1372sched_online.html 

ETWR 1373 Government and Business Correspondence
E+	[6/12]	11839	OPC	002	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH McNeely, Sarah
11839 - Internet access required. S. McNeely, 223.1795 x26303. For MANDATORY online 
orientation: email smcneely@austincc.edu during the 1st class week 
ENGL 2311 Technical & Business Writing
E+	[12/5]	11681	OPC	003	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH Butler, Wayne
11681 - Internet access required. W. Butler, 223.1795 x25690. MANDATORY: email wbutler@austincc.edu 
for orientation information during 1st class week. 
E+	[7/12]	11686	OPC	011	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH Butler, Wayne
11686 - Internet access required. W. Butler, 223.1795 x25690. MANDATORY: email wbutler@austincc.edu 
for orientation information during 1st class week. 
ETWR 2374 Online Helps and Help-Authoring Tools
E+	[9/12]	14758	OPC	002	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH Williams, Joe
14758 - Internet access required. J. Williams, 223.1795 x26066. MANDATORY: email 
jwillia4@austincc.edu during 1st class week 
ETWR 2379 Editing Government, Business and Technical Information
E+	[15/9]	14760	OPC	002	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH Mogull, Scott
14760 - Internet access required. S. Mogull, 223.1795x25099. MANDATORY orientation 
information: email scott.mogull@mogullonline.com during 1st week of class only. 

ETWR 2478 XML and Structured Authoring for Information Specialists
E+	[12/6]	14761	OPC	002	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH Williams, Joe
14761 - Internet access required. J. Williams, 223.1795 x26066. MANDATORY: email 
jwillia4@austincc.edu during 1st class week 


12 Week Session February 11 - May 11
ENGL 2311 Technical & Business Writing
E+	[9/12]	14330	OPC	008	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH McNeely, Sarah
14330 - Internet access required. S. McNeely, 223.1795 x26303. For MANDATORY online 
orientation: email smcneely@austincc.edu during the 1st class week 
E+	[9/12]	14331	OPC	010	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH Babcock, Jaime
14331 - Internet access required. J. Babcock,223.1795 x 26351. For MANDATORY online 
orientation: email jbabcock@austincc.edu during the 1st class week 


8 Week Session March 17 - May 11
ETWR 1376 Grant Proposals and Business Plans
E+	[8/12]	11841	OPC	002	PCM	Orientation req. See Open Campus	OH Mejia-Dietche, Ana
11841 - Internet access required. A.Mejia-Dietche, 223.1795 x26219. MANDATORY: email 
amejiadi@austincc.edu the 1st class week. 


Course Descriptions All Courses 
ETWR 1372 Grammar/Style
A study of the principles of an effective professional or technical style, stressing clarity, exactness, and readability. Topics include a review of grammar and punctuation, an introduction to copy editing, and editing and revision skills. Prerequisite: ENGL 1301.

ETWR 1373 Government and Business Correspondence
A course focused on business correspondence delivered through common media (business letters, memos, e-mail, and reports), across organizational hierarchies (work associates at lower, same, and higher organizational levels), and based in typical situations (good news, bad news, policy and schedule changes, information requests, reprimands, rationales, denials, and other tricky business-communication situations). Emphasizes clear, tactful, succinct, direct, well-structured writing that gets the job done. Prerequisite: Basic computer familiarity and typing skills.

ETWR 1376 Grant Proposals and Business Plans
A study of two important forms of the proposal: the grant proposal and the new-business plan (also known as business "prospectus"). Students learn how to find grants, analyze their requirements, and then write a successful grant proposal. Students also plan a business startup, do funding and marketing research for it, and then write a business plan promoting the startup to potential investors. Prerequisite: Strong writing and computer skills.

ETWR 1377 Indexing and Document Control
A study of the fundamentals of indexing documents, both print and online. Includes critique of existing indexes and brief indexing exercises focusing on processes for rough-drafting indexes. Students learn to revise and fine-tune other writers' rough-draft indexes as well as their own. Students learn processes for developing consistent indexes as a documentation team. The course includes an introduction to indexing tools in desktop publishing software such as Word and FrameMaker as well as software applications commonly used for document control. Prerequisite: Strong writing and computer skills.

ETWR 1391 Special Topics in English Technical and Business Writing
Topics address recently identified current events, skills, knowledge, and/or attitudes and behaviors pertinent to the technology or occupation and relevant to the professional development of the student, including portfolio development. May be taken a second time for credit when topics vary.

ENGL 2311 Technical & Business Writing
Principles, techniques, and skills needed to conduct scientific, technical, or business writing. Instruction in the writing of reports, letters, and other exercises applicable to a wide range of disciplines and careers. Emphasis on clarity, conciseness, and accuracy of expression. Research techniques, information design, effective use of graphics, and preparation and presentation of oral reports will be covered. Prerequisite: ENGL 1301.

ETWR 2364 Practicum (or Field Experience) -- English Technical & Business Writing
Practical general training and experiences in the workplace. The college with the employer develops and documents an individualized plan for the student. The plan relates the workplace training and experiences to the student's general and technical course of study. The guided external experiences may be for pay or no pay. This course may be repeated if topics and learning outcomes vary.

ETWR 2374 Online Helps and Help-Authoring Tools
Workshop-style course in which students study the evolution and function of online helps; critique existing online helps; learn structuring principles and navigation tools common in online helps; create online helps using several leading online help-authoring tools such as RoboHELP and AuthorIT; and write their own online helps for a software product. Prerequisite: Strong computer and writing skills.

ETWR 2375 Writing Statistics for Information Specialists
This course focuses on summarizing and explaining statistical information not only with words but also with tables, graphs, and charts; emphasizes the proper design and placement of tables, charts, and graphs; and features methods for converting these materials to other media and for dynamically linking statistical information contained in electronic databases and spreadsheets. Prerequisite: Strong computer and writing skills.

ETWR 2379 Editing Government, Business and Technical Information
Instruction and practice in proofreading, copyediting, and substantive editing skills necessary to ensure high-quality, readable, usable, well-designed documents in business, government, and industry. Gives students a working understanding of the role of the technical editor as collaborator and decision maker in the entire publication process. Topics include online editing, revising, hypertext, graphics, visual design, and project estimating. Prerequisite: Strong writing skills.

ETWR 2473 XHTML and CSS for Information Specialists
Workshop-style course in which students study the concept of hypertext; learn structuring principles and navigation tools common in online information; create web pages using XHTML and CSS; get an introduction to web-page development tools such as Dreamweaver; and overview documentation trends such as structured authoring, single-sourcing, and XML. Prerequisite: Strong Internet, computer, and writing skills.

ETWR 2476 Book-Length Documents with MS Word
In this workshop-style course, students practice structuring, designing, and writing book-length documents (books, reports, or both) using the automation and productivity features in Microsoft Word. In addition to composing clear readable text and practicing good document design, students create customized character and paragraph styles, templates, automated tables of contents, indexes, cross-references, table and figure numbers, and other numbering streams. Prerequisite: Strong computer and writing skills.

ETWR 2478 XML and Structured Authoring for Information Specialists
Introduces XML and related technologies focusing on their application in business, government, and technical communications. In addition to an overview of the raw materials needed to create and transform XML (DTDs, schemas, XSL and CSS stylesheets), the course introduces students to industry-standard solutions such as DocBook, DITA and the related tools, both commercial and open source. Students learn to create and validate XML documents and to transform them into a variety of output formats (HTML, CHM, PDF, RTF, MIF). Students also learn the origins and evolution of SGML and XML and how to evaluate the appropriateness of an XML-based solution for various situations they might encounter as professionals. Prerequisite: Knowledge of HTML; strong computer and Internet skills.