https://kent-islandora.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/facultybooks/11/thumbnail.jpgWithin the framework of New Literacy Studies, Dirk Remley presents a historical study of how technical communication practices at a World War II arsenal sponsored literacy within the community in which it operated from 1940 to 1960 and contemporary implications of similar forms of sponsorship. The Training within Industry (TWI) methods developed by the U.S. government and industry at that time included multimodal literate practices, particularly combinations of visual, oral, experiential, and print-linguistic text. Analyses reveal a hierarchy in which print-linguistic literacies were generally esteemed at the workplace and in the community. This literacy hierarch...
Beginning with a brief history of the synergistic relationship between technology and literacy, this...
As a field of study, media literacy emerged along with the study of radio propaganda in the 1930s. M...
What is literacy for? We do our work well! Why do they want to know about our literacy? These were t...
This essay presents a case study of the modes used in training employees at a munitions plant in Ohi...
Adult literacy education has traditionally been a site of the intersection of discourses about langu...
The changing workplace requires employees to engage with new ways of working that rely increasingly ...
The Fourth Industrial Revolution is widely acknowledged as a digital technological revolution buildi...
A study examined a set of 78 journal articles identified as influential in technical communication (...
Brawn is no longer the pre-eminent qualification for the majority of jobs in the technical-vocationa...
This article investigates the ways in which a subset of technical communicators acquired electronic ...
A study (1) identified in ethnographic detail the literacy-related skills that are required in today...
This paper takes a preliminary look at an emerging dominant literacy, IT literacy, and its potential...
What is the role of interaction, or, more generally, orality, in multiple-audience analysis and adap...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2013. Major: Rhetoric and Scientific and Technical...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. March 2012. Major: Rhetoric and Scientific and Technical...
Beginning with a brief history of the synergistic relationship between technology and literacy, this...
As a field of study, media literacy emerged along with the study of radio propaganda in the 1930s. M...
What is literacy for? We do our work well! Why do they want to know about our literacy? These were t...
This essay presents a case study of the modes used in training employees at a munitions plant in Ohi...
Adult literacy education has traditionally been a site of the intersection of discourses about langu...
The changing workplace requires employees to engage with new ways of working that rely increasingly ...
The Fourth Industrial Revolution is widely acknowledged as a digital technological revolution buildi...
A study examined a set of 78 journal articles identified as influential in technical communication (...
Brawn is no longer the pre-eminent qualification for the majority of jobs in the technical-vocationa...
This article investigates the ways in which a subset of technical communicators acquired electronic ...
A study (1) identified in ethnographic detail the literacy-related skills that are required in today...
This paper takes a preliminary look at an emerging dominant literacy, IT literacy, and its potential...
What is the role of interaction, or, more generally, orality, in multiple-audience analysis and adap...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. May 2013. Major: Rhetoric and Scientific and Technical...
University of Minnesota Ph.D. dissertation. March 2012. Major: Rhetoric and Scientific and Technical...
Beginning with a brief history of the synergistic relationship between technology and literacy, this...
As a field of study, media literacy emerged along with the study of radio propaganda in the 1930s. M...
What is literacy for? We do our work well! Why do they want to know about our literacy? These were t...