Thoughts of a tech. comm. grad (was: Getting started in tech writing...)

Subject: Thoughts of a tech. comm. grad (was: Getting started in tech writing...)
From: Keith Wolfe <keith -at- MERGE -dot- COM>
Date: Wed, 12 Aug 1998 12:09:07 -0600

Unlike most (all?) of the folks posting on this thread, my formal education
actually was in technical communication. Actually, my degree is English, with
a specialization in tech comm (I say "formal education," because I wore a
tuxedo the whole time). While working as a proofreader through college, I
spoke to few professional technical writers. I understood that many technical
writers were actually reincarnated professionals from previous lives, but I
never knew how much of a minority I am. How many tech writers out there have
degrees in technical writing? How many stumbled into this field from other professions?

I graduated from Texas Tech University last December and found a position as a
writer in Wisconsin (a conscious decision) placing me in the
still-wet-behind-the-ears bracket. I wasn't born a writer, and I don't believe
anyone is. I was pursuing something between an english degree and an
anthropology degree. Strange, but true. I took the Basic Technical Writing 101
class, like it, and the rest is history. I moved to WI, not because it was the
only job I could find, but for more personal reasons.

It seems to me that my education gave me the skills (grammar, style, etc.)
necessary to succeed as a tech writer. I had exposure to MS Word, of course,
but got the chance to sit down with more beefy apps like FrameMaker,
Illustrator, and others. I even learned many of the fundamental skills for
tech writing, but I probably learned more about technical writing in the first
6 months since graduation. I'm not insulting my instructors, or the tech comm
program at Tech. I learned as much as I could learn in an academic setting.
I'm saying that the best teacher is real life and our experience and
experiences will define what we are. It's simply the nature of the beast.

My education was my template. My experience is my editor.

I am still with my first employer, and from the looks of things, I'm most
likely going to stay a while. And I'm still searching for that invisible line
to cross; the line from knowing what I know, and knowing what I want to know.
That may be an unobtainable goal, but it's going to be a fun ride.


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