Archive for October, 2007

DITA in the Trenches: How to Succeed in the Transition to Content Management

Tuesday, October 23rd, 2007

STC Toronto meeting - November 13, 7pm. See the STC Toronto website for location.

If you learned in the last meeting what you can do with DITA … in this meeting you’ll find out what people have done.

In his position with The Rockley Group, Steve Manning has now participated (or is participating) in implementing DITA for a number of clients. They range from government departments to hardware and software companies. Some companies had content management systems,
some did not. Some used DITA “out of the box”, others created specializations. For this meeting, he will talk about these projects and what these companies experienced: unexpected issues, positive surprises, technology challenges, writer responses, and the measurement of success.

Steve Manning bio:

Steve Manning is a Principal with The Rockley Group and has over 19 years experience in the documentation field. He is a skilled developer of documentation in many formats (WinHelp, HTML Help, Web sites, XML, and Lotus Notes) and has created single source production
methodologies using key online tools. Steve has extensive experience in project management and has managed a number of multiple media, single source projects. Steve teaches “Enterprise Content Management” at the University of Toronto, and is a frequent speaker at conferences (ASIS, AUGI, STC, ACM SIGDOC, DIA) on the subject of XML, DITA and Content Management and is also a member of the OASIS DITA Technical Committee.

Steve is a co-author of Managing Enterprise Content: A Unified Content Strategy with Ann Rockley and Pamela Kostur.

Canadian feedback for the STC Community Handbook?

Sunday, October 21st, 2007

You may be aware that a new version of the STC Community Handbook has been released, and can be downloaded from the Leadership Community Resource page. Members of the Global Strategies Committee, of which I am one, have been asked to provide feedback. I looked through the Handbook for things that could be a problem for Canadian members of the Society, and found none.

That’s not necessarily the end of it, though. I might not have spotted something that one of you would have. And because the Handbook is supposed to be globally applicable, perhaps it would be useful to come up with our own supplement to the Handbook. Such a supplement could address:

  • Topics in the Handbook from a Canadian perspective.
  • Topics not in the Handbook that would be useful for STC communities in Canada.

So, please have a look at the Handbook and leave a comment if you have some thoughts on it.


Milan Davidovic
Canadian Issues SIG Liaison to the Global Strategies Committee

STC Professional Development Workshop

Wednesday, October 17th, 2007

Date: Saturday Oct 20, 2007

Location: SFU Harbour Centre, Room 2205, 515 W Hastings, Vancouver
Time: 9:30am to 4:30pm (lunch will be provided)

Cost:
STC Members - $150
Non-members - $175
Students - $125

E-Learning for Technical Communicators: Best Practices in Design, Development, and Delivery

Explore the exciting field of e-learning and examine best practices for designing, developing, and delivering e-learning presentations, seminars, and courses. Discover how adding e-learning to your product offerings increases client satisfaction and reduces support costs. Bring your business cases, e-learning projects, and ideas to the workshop to get practical feedback and advice.

What you’ll learn:

  • What is e-learning? What does it look like?
  • Why and when to choose e-learning over face to face learning
  • The advantages and disadvantages of e-learning
  • How people prefer to learn and how people actually learn
  • What turns people off/on about e-learning
  • How to identify what people need to learn
  • What’s the best method for teaching (based on what people need to learn)
  • How to assess what people have learned
  • What are the best instructional design methods for e-learning
  • What instructional design looks like in action
  • What tools to use to develop learning materials and what specialized skills, if any, do you need to use those tools
  • How facilitation and communication aid learning
  • The challenges of online facilitation and what a facilitator can do to encourage learning
  • What can you do to facilitate learning without a “teacher”
  • How to integrate e-learning into your product offering
  • How to judge ROI for e-learning

About Rowena Hart

The workshop will be facilitated be e-learning specialist Rowena Hart. She holds an MA in distributed learning and is a member of the Canadian Society for Training and Development. You may also recognize her as an instructor in the SFU Technical Communication Certificate Program.

As space is limited and this will be an extremely popular event, you must register and pay in advance for this workshop.

Clilck here to register online

New chapter approved!

Thursday, October 11th, 2007

In case you didn’t happen to look at the upper right corner of page 34 of the September/October 2007 of Intercom:

During the June 2007 Board of Directors teleconference meeting, the Board unanimously approved the Atlantic Canada Chapter STC’s petition for provisional status.
For more information about the Atlantic Canada Chapter STC—based in Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada—please contact William Gill at william.gill@innovatia.net.

Welcome!


Milan Davidovic
Canadian Issues SIG Liaison to the Global Strategies Committee

Word On The Street

Monday, October 1st, 2007

Everyone familiar with this nationwide festival?

Some time ago, STC Toronto used to participate in this, but hasn’t recently. I’m looking into the history of this, with an eye to our participation next year.

I checked the Vancouver, Calgary, Kitchener, and Halifax lists of exhibitors (one wasn’t up for Vancouver at the time of this posting), and I didn’t find any STC participation.

I’m going to start asking around; maybe we can get STC at each of next year’s festivals (okay, Halifax might be a tough one, unless someone’s getting something going there… ). One thing that it might be good for is promoting the STC competition, if your deadline and judging take place later in the year as STC Toronto’s does.


Milan Davidovic
STC Toronto Competition Manager
competition2007@stctoronto.org
http://stctorcomp.blogspot.com/