Proposal For Final Project – Recommendation Report
Environmental Cleanup Recommendation Report
You will need instructor approval this week if you would like to choose a topic that is not on the list above.
While different audiences will require alternative formats, your Proposal should mimic the traditional example of an “internal proposal” on pages 435-442 of Technical Communication. It is important to note that proposals are preliminary documents written to gain management’s approval (pages 109-110) for the writer to engage in tasks that lead to a Recommendation Report. A proposal also promises “deliverables” (page 422-424) that a Recommendation Report must produce.
To complete your Proposal for this week, you are required to include the following sections in the order presented below:
APA Cover Page.
Audience Analysis: Address all of the questions on pages 87-91. Insert this document at the beginning of your Proposal in order to justify your proposal’s objective, direction, and constraints.
Purpose: In the most concise terms, explain the purpose of your Proposal, which is to introduce your Recommendation Report topic to your audience.
Summary: Include a summary, which serves “as an advance organizer” (page 454) of the information contained in the full Proposal.
Introduction: Provide an explanation of the problem or question you hope to eventually answer in your Final Project. The Introduction section of your Proposal is where you will provide context and background for what gave rise to the need to produce these documents.
Proposed tasks: Includes the methodology of the Final Project broken down into clear and measurable segments. In this section of your Proposal, you must anticipate all tasks that will lead to the completion of the Recommendation Report. It is recommended that you review Chapter 18, pages 515-532 to help you complete this section.
Schedule: Provide a timeline for the completion of the above tasks and the entire Final Project – Recommendation Report (Gantt charts on pages 434-442).
Experience: Include your credentials or future goals in relation to the subject matter References in APA format. This section should be at least 150 words in length.
Include at least four sources in addition to the course textbook that are amply and appropriately cited in the text of the document and listed on the Reference page. Two sources must be scholarly journal articles from the Ashford University Library.
PLEASE MAKE SURE TO FOLLOW ALL DIRECTIONS: ATTACHED ARE THE SOURCES TO HELP YOU ALSO ALL THE NEEDED CHAPTERS. ATTACHED IS THE GRDING RUBICS SO YOU KNOW WHAT IT IS THAT THE ASSIGNMENT WILL NEED AND HOW IT WILL BE GRADED
In Week Two, you will be asked to initiate research on the topic of your Final Project
Required Resources
Required Text
Markel, M. (2015). Technical communication (11th ed.). Boston, MA: Bedford/St. Martin's.
· Chapter 1: Introduction to Technical Communication
· Chapter 2: Understanding Ethical and Legal Considerations
· Chapter 3: Writing Technical Documents
· Chapter 5: Analyzing your Audience and Purpose
· Chapter 16: Writing Proposals
Multimedia
expertvillage. (2008, July 6). Writing a formal business proposal: Formal business proposal report introduction (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.. [Video file]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iT2xbQ05Aus&feature=youtu.be
· This video offers you a brief, easy-to-understand overview of a business proposal (the type of document you will be creating for your Final Project).
expertvillage. (2008, July 6). Writing a formal business proposal: Formal business proposal table of contents (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.. [Video file]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i08Nm0gXvbU&feature=youtu.be
· For your audience to understand your information, it needs to be well-organized. Watch this video for information on a proposal’s table of contents.
Recommended Resource
Text
Markel, M. (2015). Technical communication (11th ed). New York City, NY: Bedford/St. Martin's.
· Chapter 18: Writing Recommendation Reports
· Pages 515-532. This section of the chapter provides information about how a Recommendation Report “can be the final link in a chain of documents that begins with a proposal” (page 517).