The MIT guide to science and engineering communication:

Drawing on their considerable experience teaching both college students and science professionals, James Paradis and Muriel Zimmerman have written a handbook that treats four kinds of literacy - written, oral, graphic, electronic - as crucial and inseparable in science and engineering communication....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paradis, James G. (Author), Zimmerman, Muriel L. (Author)
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Cambridge, Mass. [u.a.] MIT Press 1997
Subjects:
Summary:Drawing on their considerable experience teaching both college students and science professionals, James Paradis and Muriel Zimmerman have written a handbook that treats four kinds of literacy - written, oral, graphic, electronic - as crucial and inseparable in science and engineering communication. The MIT Guide emphasizes processes and forms that will help in creating documents and includes numerous realistic examples. A special feature of the book is its acceptance of the fact that most work in science these days is collaborative and that writing is often a group rather than a solitary activity. There is also a strong emphasis on the central role of the computer in creating and disseminating technical materials.
Physical Description:X, 290 S. Ill., graph. Darst.
ISBN:0262161427

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