Technical Description
UNIT 2 DELIVERABLES: Technical Description
Introduction
Descriptions are essential in workplace writing because they help
ensure that readers understand the full meaning of any technical
document. As technical writers, you will be responsible for
explaining, in brief and understandable language, a product or process.
Often, definitions and descriptions are only part of a larger product, or
deliverable. For example, take the O-ring issues that caused the space
shuttle Challenger to explode. Suppose you were one of a team of
scientists that had to draft a full report to congress and the American
public explaining how the disaster occurred. Does everyone know
what an O-ring is, how it was supposed to function, and/or why it
failed that day? You would be responsible for defining and describing
O-rings to your audience—a panel of lawmakers determined to find
the cause of the disaster.
Descriptions often include definitions first, and then answer the
additional questions:
What does it look like?
What are its parts?
What does it do?
How does it work?
How does it happen
Assignment
Connect what you have learned from the Pre-Assignment Tasks and
specifically from the material in Chapter 18, “Technical Descriptions,
Specifications, and Marketing Materials,” to construct a technical
description. You choose the topic from one of the three definitions
you wrote in part A. It should be something you are familiar with, but
ideally, it would be connected to your professional field of study.
You are asked to provide a handout for an audience who will be
attending a talk on your topic (the topic is whatever term you have
decided to define and describe). Ask yourself, what precisely my
readers need to know and why do they need to know it. Will they be
using the tool, selling the tool, manufacturing the tool? It helps to
write a purpose statement prior to writing your definition. (You must
include a purpose statement at the bottom of your cover page. Begin
this purpose statement with “The purpose of this document is to . . . .).
You must also name your audience in the purpose statement.
Purpose To practice creating precise and accurate technical descriptions for a
specific audience.
Instructions Select a specialized product or process you understand well or that
you can learn about quickly by researching it on the Web
(stethoscope, microscope, other tool or equipment, how gum disease
develops, how an earthquake occurs, how steel is made, how a
computer compiles and executes a program, etc). Write a 2-3 page
descriptions of the product or process incorporating sufficient visuals.
If you choose to describe a product, choose one that you know well or
will be using consistently in your work setting. Remember, you are
describing the process here not instructing someone on how to
complete the process—that would be a set of instructions. See pages
420-421 for the section on “Outlining and Writing a Product
Description.” Also, see the examples in the textbook.
Ideas/Suggestions
The box on page 428 of your textbook contains some excellent
Guidelines for Writing Descriptions. If you are writing a set of
specifications, see the box on page 431 of your textbook for a list of
Guidelines for Specifications. Make sure to use the Checklists on
pages 4325-436 when writing descriptions and specification.
Rubric This item is not so much a method for me to assess your deliverable as it is a checklist for you to use while constructing it. Your descriptive
document should include all elements of descriptions as described on
pages 418-420 of your textbook.
Submission Submit the Word or PDF document (pdf holds its format better when uploading to Black Board) to Black Board using the drop box portal in
the DELIVERABLES module (located on the left-hand column of the
course page).
Assessment Rubric for A-2 Description
Requirement
Meets All Meets Some Does Not
Meet All Major Elements Included
Clear & Limiting Title (telling title)
Appropriate level of Detail and Technicality (based on your audiences
own knowledge of the product or
process)
Visuals that assist in understanding (must have a purpose)
A Clear Descriptive Sequence (spatial, functional, chronological)
Introduction
Does the document begin with the
definition of the product or process?
Does the introduction state the
objective of the description (what you
hope to accomplish)?
Does the introduction contain only
what the user needs to know?
Body
Does the body provide a clear and logical sequence?
Are the connections between the parts explained clearly?
Conclusion
Does the conclusion provide a brief summary if necessary, or explain the
interrelation of parts- briefly, or one
complete operating cycle, or a
summary of major stages as applicable
to your type of description (see the
outlines on pages 420 and 424).
Tone and Style are Appropriate to
Audience
purpose statement lists specific audience
language is correct for audience (not high in tone nor elementary in understanding)
is objective in
Mechanics
Grammatically Correct
Spelling is Correct
Word Choice is Correct
Sentences are not convoluted
Precision
clear, concise, and to the point without excess verbiage(words)
not excessive in length nor excessively short
does not give information the audience does not need or want