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Technical Communication with 2009 MLA and 2010 APA Updates & Pocket Guide to Public Speaking 3e

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Through clear advice and an accessible visual design, Mike Markel's Technical Communication models the principles it teaches, offering practical strategies that students can put to use right away. Using a student-friendly voice, Mike Markel shows writers how to tackle the major types of documents and writing situations they will encounter in their professional lives. Excellent and always fresh sample documents and examples demonstrate effective techniques and offer plenty of opportunities for analysis, while interactive cases provide engaging scenarios for writing practice. The new edition incorporates the latest workplace and technology trends, offering new advice for how and why to use social media effectively in technical communication. Read the preface. Order Multimedia Models for Technical Communication packaged with Technical Communication, Tenth Edition using ISBN-13: 978-1-4576-1843-7.

Hardcover

First published January 1, 2002

105 people are currently reading
300 people want to read

About the author

Mike Markel

67 books55 followers
I am the author of eight books in the Detectives Seagate and Miner Mystery series: Big Sick Heart, Deviations, The Broken Saint, Three-Ways, Fractures, The Reveal, Players, and Swerve. For more information, please visit my site: http://mikemarkel.com.

I'm looking forward to meeting people on Goodreads.

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5 stars
76 (22%)
4 stars
87 (25%)
3 stars
107 (31%)
2 stars
38 (11%)
1 star
32 (9%)
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for Mark .
336 reviews
August 1, 2009
This book is about as good as it gets when discussing boring-ass technical documents. The author's tone is casual, not pendantic. The real-life models throughout the text are excellent: they aren't all perfect, but that's the point. They are real and good for pointing out their strengths and weaknesses. One warning- the book is now out in a 9th edition. I found the web recourses provided by Bedford-Martin's to be incredibly useful, but they match up with the latest edition of the book.
45 reviews7 followers
August 2, 2011
Although this book was very boring one might wonder how interesting could a book on this subject possibly be?
Profile Image for Martin.
49 reviews16 followers
March 21, 2013
výborně! tady je všechno a ještě hodně navíc :)
i přes extrémní rozsah a ukecanost (což u technické komunikace nesnáším) se to čte dobře. stovky dobrých rad, postupů a vše vysvětleno i s příklady.
ideální kniha, ke které se budu často vracet.
pokud bych měl vybrat jednu knihu o techcomm, tak asi tuhle - víc není potřeba.
Profile Image for Ember DeBoer.
44 reviews5 followers
October 6, 2008
One of the best course texts on the subject of Technical Communication I've come across. Current and full of applicable and helpful examples. My students seem to be loving it this semester. A course text that's not a waste of money? Score. :)
77 reviews
June 23, 2018
Insightful and straightforward guide and excellent examples on how to improve one's technical writing skills. Good practice exercises, too.
Profile Image for Brian Garber.
39 reviews
June 25, 2018
Read this for a required writing course that I took online. Course was dumb. Book wasn't great.
Profile Image for Alexius.
14 reviews6 followers
July 21, 2020
Boring subject but author does a solid job explaining the concepts within the textbook. Unfortunately, many of the examples used in this book are outdated.
Profile Image for MeiLing.
165 reviews35 followers
December 15, 2020
Overall, I would say this book is useful. I had to read through this book for my professional English writing class for college, and found the information about citing sources to be helpful. However, much of the information about communicating through technology is outdated and isn't the best source for learning modern day bussiness and professional writing practices. I'm sure there are better textbooks out there, but students will find some of the information in here to be helpful.

I had access to this textbook online by renting it on Chegg.com for one full semester at an affordable price.
Profile Image for Brecken.
14 reviews25 followers
November 29, 2011
I went into my Technical Communications class already "done" with it. I had no intention nor belief that I would gain anything substantial or noteworthy from a course and it's corresponding book about "technical communications" as a student studying things far from such...but I was humbly taken by surprise. My bitter attitude soon evaporated as the world of technical communications was unraveled before me and I absorbed it like my biology teacher's definition of osmosis. It was actually...fulfilling...to draft lab reports (sigh, another addition to my large collection), memos, proposals, recommendation reports, executive summaries, and more. I found myself proud of (and very much so wanting to show off) my innumerable mass of words and graphs that I so precariously placed into crisp, clean, numbered and outlined pages. The immense level of thought, time, preparation, and execution that goes into a technical document made me appreciate and respect those writers' abilities a little bit more, as it also helped me to develop more and sharpen as a human being.
Profile Image for Sarah.
194 reviews2 followers
December 8, 2015
Now, we didn't look at all the chapters in class, but I have found this to be really helpful!

I like how it gives you examples and explains the topics you're studying very well (sometimes too well!). I wish that some of the chapters could have been shorter, but that's merely a formality that can be ignored if you want to write better or just want a refresher.

Conclusion

If you're taking some kind of professional writing course, technical writing, or just want to learn about grammar, etc. more, then read this.

I know that I'll be using this again in the future. It's rare that a $90 textbook is worth rereading, but this one is.
Profile Image for Mitchell Hahn-Branson.
142 reviews5 followers
December 26, 2012
I haven't read every word of this book yet, but the chapters I have read have been tremendously valuable in helping me plan a career in technical writing. Markel is easily a good enough writer to make the subject matter interesting and accessible, and his exercises at the end of each chapter genuinely reinforce comprehension of the material with challenging real-world examples. I expect to find this book useful far beyond the scope of my class work.
Profile Image for Hannah.
Author 4 books41 followers
December 12, 2012
This book is really outdated and is not really practical for the modern world. I mean, some of these things are useful, because some things do not change with the passing of time. All technological reference about modern technology is outdated. Seriously outdated. Some of the things do not even make sense to me, because it went out of style years ago. The book is okay, but not okay when it comes to technology. Do not read it for that. You would be wasting your time.
Profile Image for Ben.
77 reviews3 followers
June 29, 2013
Markel constructs a comprehensive and accessible introduction into the elements of technical communication. His ample use of examples provide useful models for anyone to analyze and/or mimic when constructing technical documents of his or her own. The text does not expect a linear reading. Skipping around is expected and easy. In a word: useful.
Profile Image for Hannah Thomas.
373 reviews
August 24, 2015
I used this as a textbook for an english class and it was very helpful! I am horrible when it comes to writing papers and similar documents. When I used "Technical Communication", it was one of the most helpful guides that I could use forever! Now, whenever I have an assignment that is similar to any document in this textbook, I know where to go ;)
Profile Image for Erin.
11 reviews3 followers
June 16, 2008
This is a book used for a class I teach.

This book is O.K. There are definitely some areas that could have been better covered. I ended up supplementing information in this book with information from Kitty Locker's Business and Administrative Communication.
181 reviews33 followers
September 13, 2014
I read this for a graduate class in technical writing. It was okay. More or less, it provides a good foundation for the subject. Nothing particularly memorable.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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