Good writing skills are ESSENTIAL for career success in almost
any technical career you might be considering. There are many
people with good technical skills; one way to distinguish yourself
from the person in the next cubicle is by good writing.
Good writing is reader-centered. That is, you begin by identifying
your target audience, understanding the background of that audience,
and designing your writing product to achieve your desired goal for
that audience.
Proper English grammar, structure, style, usage, and spelling are
expected in just about everything we write.
Some of your write better than others. If your writing is rough,
you should work on it. Otherwise, you may find that is a limiting
factor for your eventual career advancement. If your writing is
good, you should consider working to make it better yet. It is a
competitive world "out there."
The staff of the
Ott Writing Center,
in the new Rainier Library, 288-5542,
stands ready to help you. I strongly encourage you to call to make
an appointment. Take with you either one of your homework
assignments I have marked up (they will disagree with some of my
comments; that is OK, too), or take a draft of an assignment in
progress. You might take your project introduction.
It is fine with me if you take an assignment from another class,
too. What is important is that you work to improve your skills at
English writing.
The Writing Center also offers walk-up service at the kiosk on the
first floor of Cudahy.
For more immediate advice, Dr. Paula Gillespie, Paula.Gillespie {at} Marquette.edu,
the Director of the Writing Center,
encourages e-mail questions directly to her. This accomplished two
complementary goals:
- You have easy, non-threatening, asynchronous interface
to high-quality advice.
- She gets a chance to try out on-line tutorial help with
people comfortable with the technology before she attempts
to put more of the Writing Center activities on-line.
Do not expect the Writing Center or Dr. Gillespie to take your work
and "fix it." If they did that, you would not learn. Their role
is to advise you so you can fix it, this time, and in all your
writing to come.
Try it out. Recommended! If you do a good job, perhaps on your
next homework, I'll complain about the content, rather than the
writing :-)
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