Phil Druker/Department of English/ University of Idaho

 

Semester Project
Advanced Technical Writing.
Phil Druker, Instructor


Early in the semester, you need to decide on a topic for the research project you will complete for this class. The end product of this project should be a 15 to 20 page document in which you report on the research you complete during the semester. We will work on the project in increments during the semester. 

This research should be appropriately sophisticated and should include (1) data gathered through primary research (data from laboratory work, field studies, surveys, interviews, or other "hands-on" work where you directly collect data) and (2) data gathered through secondary research (information collected from other people's work, library research). This secondary research involves collecting information from professional journals, government reports, corporate reports, or other sophisticated sources. To complete this secondary research, you will not want to rely on popular magazines, newspapers, or the Internet.

The research project needs to be directed at a specific audience and meet that audience's needs. Thus, in some way your project needs to be aimed at solving a problem for someone. Further, your research project report should not merely summarize the data you collect; rather, you will want to interpret, analyze, and explain your data to meet your audience's needs. You will decide who your audience is for your project and write at an appropriate level of technicality for that audience; however, I should be able to understand the information at least in a general way and follow the logic of the material you present. 

If you are working on a research project for in your work place, for a thesis, or for another class this semester, you may work on that project for this class. If you are not currently working on a project, you might consider trying to develop a project similar to the kind of work you hope to do after graduating so you can show potential employers the kind of work you are capable of producing.

Project Due Dates:

As the semester progress, you will receive instruction about completing each element listed below:

By the second or third week you should have decided on a subject area. Then you can focus on a specific topic, do research, refine the topic and find a specific problem, research background information, and develop a research plan. The first progress report, in which you summarize the information you have collected to write the proposal, is due the sixth week. The proposal is due during the eighth week. In this proposal, you will propose to document the project you will complete by the end of the semester.  


After you submit your proposal and I accept it, you will begin compiling information for your the first section in the body of your final report. It is due the eleventh week of class. It will form part of the body of your report. A second progress report is due after the section of the final report. 

The final report is due during no-examination week-- the fifteenth week. To pass the course you must submit an acceptable final report.

 

Note: Students who enroll in the Web English 317 section will complete similar assignments, but the requirements will be a little less difficult and some of the assignments will be different.  Their final report should be 12-15 pages long at the end of the semester.