Introduction

Marc Bryant twmarcb at yahoo.com
Wed Jul 12 21:41:18 MDT 2006


Hi Sherrill, 


1. Keep up with technology, learn the scientific method, write as much as you can. 

2. MIT is a good place to start, but really any college with a sound technical program. I would ask interested students to focus on technology. I recommend that anyone looking to have a career in technical writing, with a high degree of success to double major in Professional Writing or English and a technical field like Computer Science, Engineering, Biology, etc. This will give them an edge when they enter the marketplace. If you had to pick a single degree, I would take the technical degree over the humanities focus.

3. Salary ranges really vary by location and experience. The range is probably 30k - 120k+.




----- Original Message ----
From: Sherrill Fink <slfink at verizon.net>
To: techwr-l at lists.techwr-l.com
Sent: Wednesday, July 12, 2006 7:07:52 PM
Subject: Introduction

Hi,

I used to be on this list many years ago, and now I'm returning for a  
short while.  I worked as a DoD Technical Writer/Editor for 15 years,  
and four years ago I resigned to homeschool my children full-time.  I  
do accept the occasional freelance job, though, and I enjoy keeping  
my hand in.  Recently, I was asked to give a 1-hr talk to  
homeschooled high-school students on tech-whirling as a career.

So, naturally, my thoughts fondly returned to the tech-whirlers who  
were always such a wealth of information and encouragement to me in  
earlier years.  Would anyone be willing to weigh in on:

1.  What students can learn now to help them prepare
2.  What colleges are good to attend for this type of work (I know  
these don't precisely correspond to those with "technical writing" as  
a major)
3.  What salary range could they expect

I don't want to just "use" you folks as a substitute for my own  
research, but since I've been out of active commission for a while,  
and before that was in the government (now, that isn't NECESSARILY  
redundant, mind you), I would like to ask for your opinions to  
augment my research.

This is your opportunity to spout off to those young whippersnappers  
of today.  What would you want newbies to learn before they try to  
apprentice under you?

Thanks,
Sherrill Fink
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

WebWorks ePublisher Pro for Word features support for every major Help
format plus PDF, HTML and more. Flexible, precise, and efficient content 
delivery. Try it today!. http://www.webworks.com/techwr-l 

Doc-To-Help includes a one-click RoboHelp project converter. It's that easy.  Watch the demo at http://www.DocToHelp.com/TechwrlList

---
You are currently subscribed to TECHWR-L as twmarcb at yahoo.com.

To unsubscribe send a blank email to 
techwr-l-unsubscribe at lists.techwr-l.com
or visit http://lists.techwr-l.com/mailman/options/techwr-l/twmarcb%40yahoo.com


To subscribe, send a blank email to techwr-l-join at lists.techwr-l.com

Send administrative questions to lisa at techwr-l.com. Visit
http://www.techwr-l.com/techwhirl/ for more resources and info.








More information about the TECHWR-L mailing list