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Receiving Feedback
 | Technical writing needs personality, not sentimentality. Only give your group members
reports to edit in which you are not too emotionally involved. The loss of a loved one
does need writing about, but unless you have emotionally detached from it, your readers
will have a difficult time giving objective comments to subjective writing. |
 | Throw out the first draft is the final draft mode of thinking. Writing is a
process; revising is a given for everyone. |
 | The feedback you receive from your class members will help you see your strengths and
weaknesses. Value what they have to say to you. You may not like it, but they are there to
tell you what works and what does not work in a piece of writing. |
 | All technical writers must consider their audiences. Your group members help you
discover what real readers need. |
 | Listen closely to what your editors have to say. Dont second guess them. If you
have questions, ask for clarification or refer to your handbook. |
 | Sometimes you will get two different opinions on the same aspect of your writing, i.e.,
one will like the introduction, the other will not. Here is where you need to trust
yourself as a writer. However if both point out a problem, you should consider rewriting
it. |
 | Be open to suggestions, but as the writer, you make the final decision. |
 | Tracking recurring problems will help you with your next essay. |
A Reminder:
The act of revision allows us the freedom to change and grow, to become the best
writers we can be, to truly communicate to other human beings. We cannot do this in our
daily lives, as we do not have the time. Where else but in the writing class can we find
someone to spend the time and energy to help us find the exact words, the precise way to
communicate how we think and feel. Most of the time, it is only in our writing that we
have the luxury of showing how thoughtful, how creative, how caring we really are. We
recreate ourselves each time we allow our fingers to change a word, add a sentence, or
throw out a paragraph. We need to thank our editors for helping us do that. |

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