GOLF!
We should be teaching workplace writing the way they teach golf. Break it into its parts, explain techniques for each, then practice, practice, practice…on a real golf course!
They don’t teach you golf by setting you up with a program that simulates golf…”Tiger Woods PGA Tour PlayStation 2 Gameplay.” That’s a fun game, but it doesn’t teach you how to golf.
You need to learn to grip the actual club (and adjust the grip for various shots). You need to learn the proper stance for different clubs and different lies. You need to learn the three equal parts of the swing (backswing—“DON’T PICK THE CLUB UP!”; downswing—“START WITH THE HIPS!”; follow-through—“BACK HEEL UP!”) You learn the fade and the draw, the sandwedge, chipping and putting.
The way golf instructors isolate each aspect of golf and give the student specific techniques to manage them all, writing teachers should break workplace writing down to isolate each aspect so students can learn specific techniques to better manage every aspect:
· generating useful reader-based content,
· organizing with the message first then the details,
· designing docs of any kind with the reader’s eye,
· organizing message-first paragraphs,
· structuring sentences the eye-brain system can readily decode,
· using plain English, and
· maintaining correct mechanics.
What follows is my saga as a college business writing teacher who ventured innocently out into the “real world” and back again, and how that trip radically changed my approach to teaching workplace writing. You may need a canteen and some trail mix. Good luck. . . .