I was the coordinator for STC New England's InterChange 2018 Conference in Lowell, Massachusetts. In my role, I had to propose a budget and venue to the Chapter Council, recruit and manage volunteers who did work on specific aspects of the conference (i.e. sponsorship, marketing, materials and collateral, and speaker management). I scheduled meetings with the volunteers and checked in on them to see if they needed help. I also served as an evaluator of potential speakers and their presentations.
|
I composed this PowerPoint presentation for the Society of Technical Communication's New England Chapter with PTC's Victor Gerdes, Vice President of Product Management for ThingWorx, PTC's Internet of Things (IoT) platform software. I presented with Victor on how Augmented Reality (AR) can be used to transform technical communication and provide richer experiences to people who currently rely on paper or online guides, video tutorials, and in-person or virtual instruction to learn new processes and tools to solve problems.
|
In the summer of 2016, I interviewed technical communicators in their twenties and thirties, the millennial generation, and wrote about their perceptions of their profession and careers in an article for the October 2016 issue of Society for Technical Communication's Intercom Magazine. I enjoyed learning why each person entered the technical communication profession, and I learned a lot about the different types of personalities attracted to technical writing, which helped me develop the narrative for this article. I balanced out the millennial viewpoints with one from a Baby Boomer, who is encouraged by what he sees in the upcoming generation of technical communicators.
|
Below are the links to user’s guides I wrote for Canary Systems, Inc. for their 2015 release. Because I am bound by a confidentiality agreement, I cannot provide physical copies directly to others without written consent from the company. However, you can download the guides I created using the links below.
|
This is my graduate thesis portfolio proposal, written in 2014 for the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. I consulted many professional journals, including Technical Communication Quarterly, The Journal of Business and Technical Communication, IEEE's Transactions on Professional Communication. In addition, I consulted my graduate, undergraduate, and teaching textbooks in technical communication.
|
In late 2013, I wrote this short (293-word) article about the spacecraft Voyager 1 becoming the first man-made object to leave our Solar System. The This piece places the accomplishment in the context of Voyager winning a race against its predecessors, Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11. I consulted the Jet Propulsion Laboratory's 2012 study on an effect called "The Pioneer Anomaly," which explained what forces were acting on the Pioneer probes as they traveled deeper into space.
|
This is the program for the Society for Technical Communication (STC) New England Chapter's InterChange conference in 2015. This is a regional conference where technical communicators from Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, and Maine meet to network, hear developments in the field, and learn new ideas they can take back to their workplaces. This year, it was held at the University of Massachusetts Lowell in Lowell, Massachusetts.
|
I wrote this usability report in late 2014. It includes the test plan, personas, heuristic evaluations, and results of the usability test I performed for the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth's English department's Job Clearinghouse website prototype, developed from May to September 2014. I included various appendices to the report to show the forms for test I administered, including questionnaires, product reaction words, and agreements to be recorded. I observed how users interact with technology and what their reactions are to a website that's still in a prototype stage. I found their reactions to be invaluable in determining what users expect from a webpage and how they react to a piece of technology that was above their abilities to use it.
This report helped the head of the English department and the university's IT department see the benefits of having a dedicated web portal for English and Professional Writing students, and that it is a feasible project for replacing a more rudimentary and restrictive wiki.
|
I worked on two repair guides for iFixit.com in late 2013. In this guide, I wrote instructions on how to take apart the exterior of an Epson Stylus C84 printer. This was a prerequisite guide to other repairs for the device. Writing this guide taught me the best practices of usability: writing concisely, in easy to understand language, while being very specific with my instruction. I took great pains to indicate where users should position their fingers and tools in order to properly remove the plastic panels. The guide was formatted using a simplified wiki. These instructions helped the users of this particular printer become familiar with the process of accessing the main components, which gives a foundation to take on more complex repairs.
|
This is the other guide I wrote for iFixit.com in the fall of 2013. Here, I instructed users to carefully remove the porous pad from the base of the Epson Stylus C84 printer, clean it, and reinstall it. The purpose of this guide was to maintain the printer’s top performance by cleaning a frequently inked component. I took great pains to write cautions and prepare users for the messy job. I practiced the concise and specific writing that go hand-in-hand with the best usability practices. This repair guide used a simplified wiki formatting. This guide helps users extend the life of their printer by performing maintenance on one of the wear items. Cleaning the porous pads will ensure better quality printouts and a longer service life compared to an unmaintained printer.
|