Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy the book The Craft of Research for excellent writing training.
Different poster. Which edition of book? There are 4.
Watching this post with interest. DS (16) is the usual suspect; strong math, science, business kid. Will pursue CS combined with business. Writing is his weakness. I am a writer, so I failed my son lol. He uses fancy words appropriately, but his sentence structure is abysmal. Keep explaining that writing is absolutely critical for business and CS. I'm exhausted from the effort.
Technical writing is way different than writing prose. You might have actually saved him by not teaching him how you write and he can just learn how engineers write.
Unlikely. I've worked as a writer in a number of technical fields and the sheer number of people who cannot write a basic, coherent sentence is astonishing. Yes, technical writing is different than prose writing, but basic writing skills are universal. Too often, STEM professionals lack those skills, because, as one showed us earlier, they consider it "soft" and a "fake" skill and a "waste of time."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy the book The Craft of Research for excellent writing training.
Different poster. Which edition of book? There are 4.
Watching this post with interest. DS (16) is the usual suspect; strong math, science, business kid. Will pursue CS combined with business. Writing is his weakness. I am a writer, so I failed my son lol. He uses fancy words appropriately, but his sentence structure is abysmal. Keep explaining that writing is absolutely critical for business and CS. I'm exhausted from the effort.
Technical writing is way different than writing prose. You might have actually saved him by not teaching him how you write and he can just learn how engineers write.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy the book The Craft of Research for excellent writing training.
Different poster. Which edition of book? There are 4.
Watching this post with interest. DS (16) is the usual suspect; strong math, science, business kid. Will pursue CS combined with business. Writing is his weakness. I am a writer, so I failed my son lol. He uses fancy words appropriately, but his sentence structure is abysmal. Keep explaining that writing is absolutely critical for business and CS. I'm exhausted from the effort.
Technical writing is way different than writing prose. You might have actually saved him by not teaching him how you write and he can just learn how engineers write.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Buy the book The Craft of Research for excellent writing training.
Different poster. Which edition of book? There are 4.
Watching this post with interest. DS (16) is the usual suspect; strong math, science, business kid. Will pursue CS combined with business. Writing is his weakness. I am a writer, so I failed my son lol. He uses fancy words appropriately, but his sentence structure is abysmal. Keep explaining that writing is absolutely critical for business and CS. I'm exhausted from the effort.
Anonymous wrote:Buy the book The Craft of Research for excellent writing training.
Anonymous wrote:Real engineering students don't waste their time on fake classes like writing. What a soft class.