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List of Online Webinars and North American Conferences for Technical Writers

May 10, 2018 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

There’s no short­age of train­ing web sites, webi­na­rs, and con­fer­ences to keep your skills sharp.

Adobe’s blog:
https://blogs.adobe.com/techcomm/

MadCap’s free webinars:
https://www.madcapsoftware.com/resources/recorded-webinars.aspx

Scrip­to­ri­um Pub­lish­ing offers time­ly and insight­ful thoughts on tech­ni­cal writ­ing trends:
https://www.scriptorium.com/blog/

The Soci­ety for Tech­ni­cal Com­mu­ni­ca­tion (STC) also offers webi­na­rs and cours­es for a fee:
https://www.stc.org/education/

Here’s a list of upcom­ing con­fer­ences this year in North America.

Lava­con, Octo­ber 21–24, 2018, New Orleans, LA
http://lavacon.org

Mad­World Con­fer­ence, June 3–6, 2018, San Diego, CA
http://www.madcapsoftware.com/events/madworld/

STC annu­al con­fer­ence, May 20–23, 2018, Orlan­do, FL
http://summit.stc.org/

Write the Docs + Open Help Cincin­nati, August 18–22, Cincin­nati, OH
http://www.writethedocs.org/conf/cincinnati/2018/

Writ­er­sUA User Assis­tance Boot Camp, Oct 4–5, 2018, Raleigh, NC
http://east.writersua.com/

How do you keep your skills up to date? Any oth­er North Amer­i­can con­fer­ences that I should add?

Filed Under: Career Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog Tagged With: conferences, technical writing, training

List of upcoming
technical communications conferences

February 5, 2015 by RDesprez 6 Comments

Here’s a list of upcom­ing con­fer­ences this year in North America.

Intel­li­gent Con­tent Con­fer­ence, March 23–25, San Francisco
http://www.intelligentcontentconference.com/

Mad­World 2015 World­wide Learn­ing Con­fer­ence, April 12–14, San Diego
http://www.madcapsoftware.com/events/madworld/

Writ­er­sUA User Assis­tance Boot Camp, April 15–17, Seattle
http://west.writersua.com/

Con­tent Man­age­ment Strategies/DITA North Amer­i­ca, April 20–22, Chicago
http://www.cm-strategies.com/2015/index.htm

IA Sum­mit, April 22–26, Minneapolis
http://www.iasummit.org/

Write the Docs 2015, May 17–19, Portland
http://www.writethedocs.org/conf/na/2015/

STC annu­al con­fer­ence, June 21–24, Columbus
http://summit.stc.org/

Lava­con, Octo­ber 18–21, New Orleans
http://lavacon.org

How do you keep your skills up to date? Any oth­er North Amer­i­can con­fer­ences that I should add?

Filed Under: Career Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Training Tagged With: career development, conferences, technical writing, training

Improve your training with practice and feedback

September 24, 2014 by RDesprez Leave a Comment

Have you ever attend­ed a course or train­ing ses­sion that missed its mark?

Most of the cours­es that I have tak­en haven’t met my expec­ta­tions for dif­fer­ent rea­sons. In uni­ver­si­ty, there was the pro­fes­sor who’d lec­ture for an hour, lulling stu­dents to sleep. There was the work­place train­er who focused on how the soft­ware worked but not the tasks that stu­dents (or learn­ers) required. There was the employ­ee who was threat­ened about shar­ing too much for fear of los­ing her job so she with­held knowl­edge, ren­der­ing the train­ing almost use­less. I could go on.

In my expe­ri­ence, senior man­age­ment holds the belief that any­one can train. But few peo­ple do it well.

Too often train­ing is just a “pletho­ra of regur­gi­tat­ed knowl­edge,” said Jim Tall­man, pres­i­dent of North Pacif­ic Train­ing & Per­for­mance Inc. Tall­man spoke at the Cana­da West Chap­ter of the Soci­ety for Tech­ni­cal Com­mu­ni­ca­tion for a pro­fes­sion­al devel­op­ment ses­sion on Sep­tem­ber 13th.

Train­ing that focus­es on rehash­ing knowl­edge doesn’t help learn­ers per­form their jobs bet­ter and pro­vides incon­sis­tent results, he said.  Some exam­ples of inef­fec­tive train­ing include:

  • The cur­ricu­lum fol­lows the­o­ry, not skills or tasks that one per­forms on the job.
  • Con­tent fol­lows course design, not a task analysis.
  • Exam­ples focus on sys­tem fea­tures, not work­place processes.
  • The course high­lights the knowl­edge of the sys­tem, not improved performance.
  • The instruc­tor nev­er stops talking.

A better way to train

An alter­na­tive method of train­ing focus­es on improv­ing the learn­ers’ skills. Some ele­ments of effec­tive training:

  • Task analy­sis dri­ves course design.
  • Cur­ricu­lum reflects the job.
  • Con­tent is prac­tice-based and learn­er paced.
  • Course results in improved job performance.

He said: “This is the pre­ferred way…that train­ing should be designed to give learn­ers what they need and clients their money’s worth. Instruc­tion is based on how learn­ers learn and not on how much the train­er can demo his or her prowess in the field.”

Train­ing should be ide­al­ly 30 per­cent pre­sen­ta­tion or lec­ture and 60 per­cent hands-on (such as exer­cis­es or activ­i­ties), said Tall­man. The final 10 per­cent of the course should be allo­cat­ed on feed­back so that learn­ers can improve. Most tra­di­tion­al train­ing is reversed with the instruc­tor talk­ing most of the time and learn­ers’ eyes glaz­ing over after 20 min­utes of lec­ture, he said.

In addi­tion, effec­tive train­ing should be also mean­ing­ful, mem­o­rable, moti­va­tion­al, and mea­sur­able, Tall­man said.

  • Mean­ing­ful: Train­ing should be rel­e­vant for learn­ers so they can per­form key tasks rel­e­vant to their jobs.
  • Mem­o­rable: Learn­ers need to remem­ber their train­ing after the course. Job aids, hand­outs, and quick ref­er­ence cards may be able to assist.
  • Moti­va­tion­al: Train­ing should moti­vate learn­ers in the class­room so that they want to apply the new skills.
  • Mea­sur­able: Effec­tive train­ing teach­es new skills that can be observed. “Good learn­ing events stress observ­able behav­iors, give learn­ers suf­fi­cient prac­tice over time, and pro­vide per­for­mance feedback.”

Not sur­pris­ing­ly, Tall­man’s train­ing focused on prac­tice and feed­back so that learn­ers could improve. This was an excel­lent presentation!

Filed Under: Career Development, Robert Desprez | Vancouver technical writer | Blog, Technology, Training Tagged With: career development, technical writing, technology, training

About Robert Desprez

I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at some of British Columbia's largest high-tech firms. I have served in leadership positions for the Society for Technical Communication and have worked as a writing instructor at Vancouver's Simon Fraser University.

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Vancouver Technical Writer. Former Instructor at Simon Fraser University. Dog Lover. Coffee Drinker. Tennis and Piano Player.

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About Me

Robert Desprez I have worked as a Vancouver technical writer for more than 20 years, working at Kodak, Boeing, Teck Resources, and FortisBC. In addition, I have worked as a writing instructor at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver.

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North Van­cou­ver, British Columbia
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