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Software for complex problem solving can dazzle people with
advanced features and alluring visuals, but when actually put to
use it often disappoints and even frustrates users. This software
rarely follows the user's own work methods, nor does it give people
the degree of control and choice that they truly need.
This book presents a groundbreaking approach to interaction design
for complex problem solving applications. The author uses her vast
field experience to present a new way of looking at the whole
process, and treats complex problem solving software and web
applications as a distinct class with its own set of usefulness
demands and design criteria. This approach highlights integrated
interactions rather than discrete actions, clearly defines what
makes problem solving complex, and explores strategies for
analyzing, modeling, and designing for exploratory inquiries.
-In depth case studies ranging from IT troubleshooting to marketing
analysis to risk assessments in healthcare show exactly where and
what goes wrong in real world activities and how to improve them.
-Presents a system and framework for analyzing complex work and
takes the mystery out of eliciting patterns of work and their
meanings.
-Offers new perspectives for support and new design strategies for
building the right models into programs so that they effectively
address users' dynamic work.
-Allows designers to turn findings into useful designs for problems
that require users to create new knowledge but with no one right
answer and with many methods of reaching solutions.
This anthology brings together voices from industry and academia in
a call for elevating the status, identity, value, and influence of
technical communicators. Editors Barbara Mirel and Rachel Spilka
assert that technical communicators must depart from their
traditional roles, moving instead in a more influential and
expansive direction. To help readers explore the possibilities,
contributions from innovative thinkers and leaders in technical
communication propose ways to redefine the field's identity and
purposes and to expand the parameters of its work.
The chapters included here all point toward new directions for
greater growth and influence of the field. Contributors depart from
traditional ideas and solutions and discuss new and in some cases
radical points, provoking further thought and discussion. Its
exploration of fresh territory uncovers new research topics and
directions, and provides an examination of both internal,
industry-academia relationships and external relationships between
technical communicators and other professionals. In its entirety,
this collection represents an inclusive vision for the future,
targeting such wide-ranging issues as creating effective
professional organizations, disseminating research to diverse
audiences, transitioning to more influential job roles, exerting
leadership in usability, and creating hybrid identities and
collaborative programs between industry and academic to support
them.
The diverse voices from industry and academia will inspire readers
to think differently about the discipline's identity and direction,
and to build on the ideas they find herein to effect change within
their own spheres. As required reading for academics and
professionals in technical communication, this collection is a
critical step in reshaping and reinvigorating the technical
communication field to ensure its survival and growth in the 21st
century.
This anthology brings together voices from industry and academia in
a call for elevating the status, identity, value, and influence of
technical communicators. Editors Barbara Mirel and Rachel Spilka
assert that technical communicators must depart from their
traditional roles, moving instead in a more influential and
expansive direction. To help readers explore the possibilities,
contributions from innovative thinkers and leaders in technical
communication propose ways to redefine the field's identity and
purposes and to expand the parameters of its work. The chapters
included here all point toward new directions for greater growth
and influence of the field. Contributors depart from traditional
ideas and solutions and discuss new and in some cases radical
points, provoking further thought and discussion. Its exploration
of fresh territory uncovers new research topics and directions, and
provides an examination of both internal, industry-academia
relationships and external relationships between technical
communicators and other professionals. In its entirety, this
collection represents an inclusive vision for the future, targeting
such wide-ranging issues as creating effective professional
organizations, disseminating research to diverse audiences,
transitioning to more influential job roles, exerting leadership in
usability, and creating hybrid identities and collaborative
programs between industry and academic to support them. The diverse
voices from industry and academia will inspire readers to think
differently about the discipline's identity and direction, and to
build on the ideas they find herein to effect change within their
own spheres. As required reading for academics and professionals in
technical communication, this collection is a critical step in
reshaping and reinvigorating the technical communication field to
ensure its survival and growth in the 21st century.
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