Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Project One: The Employment Project

During the Employment Project, you will learn strategies for seeking and securing employment or an internship, with particular attention to the documents people normally use to represent themselves and their qualifications to potential employers. In addition, you will research international job markets in order to better understand the hiring process in whichever country you choose to seek employment.

This first project asks you to work individually for the most part, but you will also be working with your peers to exchange ideas and feedback in your blogs.

SUMMARY

Locate a specific job or internship for which you are qualified and prepare application materials tailored to that job. If you already have a job, find one that would be an advance for you, then prepare application materials for that position. Step 1 of the project asks you to learn about and use various web-based resources for job seekers and ultimately to select one real job to pursue. Step 2 asks you to prepare a print resume suitable for such a position. Step 3 asks you to prepare the all-important cover letter (i.e., "Job Application Letter"). In Step 4, you will assess your experience in a "Project Assessment Document." In the process of completing each step, you will work closely with your peers and your instructor to shape your writing so that it represents you and your experience fully and effectively.

GOALS

This project emphasizes several important goals that all professional writers should bear in mind and that are consistent with those of the Professional Writing Program at Purdue. In the Employment Project, you will learn to shape your writing for very specific situations and purposes:

Writing in Context

Writing for a range of defined audiences and stakeholders

Project Management

Understand, develop and deploy various strategies for planning, researching, drafting, revising, and editing documents both individually and collaboratively.
Select and use appropriate technologies that effectively and ethically address professional situations and audiences.
Build professional ethos through documentation and accountability.

Document Design

Make rhetorical design decisions about workplace documents, including
understanding and adapting to genre conventions and audience expectations understanding and implementing design principles of format and layout
drafting, researching, testing, and revising visual designs and information architecture

Teamwork

Learn and apply strategies for successful teamwork and collaboration, such as
working online with colleagues

Research

Understand and use various research methods to produce professional documents, including
analyzing professional contexts

DELIVERABLES

#1: Initial Research and Job Ad Analysis. Using the resources we have discussed in class, find 2 job ads located in 2 different countries (4 job ads total), produce a link to each. We will be collecting the ads in a blog post, along with your analysis of the two job markets. Then select one job to focus on and complete the Job Ad Analysis form.

#2: Resume. Your resume (one or more pages in length, depending upon the type of job and the depth of experience) should adapt features drawn from the samples discussed in class or available for review at the Online Writing Lab. It's critical that you shape your resume to the specific job or internship you have chosen to apply for (that it's suited to the context), so be sure to include only the relevant aspects of your professional experience. As in the Job Application Letter, your writing needs to be error-free, concise, and presented in an easily readable format. Your resume draft should be posted to your blog as a PDF attachment to a blog message that explains the nature of the attachment and invites peer feedback. Read these directions for converting your documents to PDF format if you have any questions about the process. You should also review the principles, guidelines, and resume samples in The Thomson Handbook (Chapter 12, pages 226-232). Pay special attention to the Project Checklist "Evaluating Your Resume's Content" and "Evaluating Your Resume's Design" on pages 228-229. Ask yourself these questions as you prepare your final draft.

#3: Job Application Letter. The job application letter is critical to your efforts to secure a job, perhaps as critical as your resume itself. For Project 1, your letter should be no longer than one or two pages (one is preferable in most cases), following the suggestions and models discussed during class. You should submit the draft of your application letter to your blog for peer review. Your letter should be attached to a blog post that includes a cover note that follows guidelines for Eliciting Good Response and the PDF version of the letter. (Read these directions for converting your documents to PDF format if you have any questions about the process.) Use the tag "Job Application letter." Review the sample in The Thomson Handbook, p 225. Your letter should be context-specific and should contain the required five parts (heading, greeting, opening, persuasion, closing) in the format shown.

#4: Project Assessment Document: As you near the end of your work on the Employment Project, prepare a 500-word overview and analysis of your deliverables and the process you used to complete them. Your Project Assessment Document should answer most of the following questions, each of which is tied to the major goals of the assignment:

Writing in Context

How did the particular job you applied for affect how you wrote your letter? Did it change or affect how you presented yourself? How did applying for this position help you understand aspects of your experience you might need to develop more?

Project Management

What was the most challenging document to produce and why? Briefly describe and explain one of the significant revisions you made to this document after your initial draft.

How well did you plan your work on this project? What might you have done differently?

Research

Which research resource proved to be the most beneficial for you? The least? Explain. What did you learn about the particular job field before composing your application letter?

Teamwork

What was one way that peer feedback helped you improve your work? How did responding to the work of others help you improve your own work?

Document Design

What is the most effective aspect of your deliverables in terms of presentation or design? Have you deliberately adapted a standard form in an unusual or creative way? If so, why?
Your Project Assessment Document is due when you turn in your completed Employment Project.

GRADING

The Employment Project is worth 25% of your course grade. The breakdown for each of its components is as follows:

Deliverable 1: Inventory and Job Market Analysis (20%);

Deliverable 2: Job Application Letter (30%);

Deliverable 3: Print Resume (30%);

Deliverable 4: Project Assessment Document (20%).

Criteria

When grading your project, your instructor will pay particular attention to see whether you have effectively adapted your documents to the job for which you have applied. Your writing will need to be precise, accurate, and well-suited to the context (the job/field) and to the rhetorical occasion (in terms of tone, style, and content). In this case, a generic, catch-all resume and cover letter will not satisfy the requirements of the project.

Revision

You will have opportunities to revise your work throughout the process and will be permitted to revise once again after receiving your grade on the project, subject to these restrictions: 1) Your revision should be substantial (a few fixes alone are not enough to raise a grade); 2) you turn in your completed revision within one week of the date it was returned to you with a grade; 3) you include submission notes that specify precisely what you did to improve your work, including whether or not you made use of the OWL's online or on-site tutoring.

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