When you're through, just click on SEND to check your answers. If you want to start over, just click on RESET!
Click on one of the following that best defines the application letter is: An in-depth summary of the contents of the resume, provided in case the recipient does not have a copy of the resume. Highlights of the resume, particularly of those aspects of your background that relate to the specific job you are seeking. A brief "cover" letter that states the dates and times you are available for interview. If you wrote a brief letter that stated the dates and times you were available for interview and mentioned the job you were seeking, this would be an example of which of the following types of letters: Objective letter Highlight letter Inquiry letter Resume If you wrote an application letter in which you described your key skills as they related to the job you were seeking, you would have written which of the following types of application letter: Objective letter Cover letter Highlight letter In the first paragraph of the body of the application letter, you should do which of the following: Focus right away on your key qualifications, either your educational background or your work background, whichever is the best or the most relevant to the job you are seeking. Indicate the purpose of the letter, state your source of information about the job, and include one key detail about yourself that will be eye-catching. Explain how to get in touch with you, what dates and times you are available for interview, and what salary range you expect. If you were a professional technical writer and if in your application letter you had successive paragraphs on your technical knowledge, the desktop publishing software you had used, the kinds of manuals you had written, and the administrative duties you had performed, you would have used which type of organization for the main body of the letter: Functional organization Thematic organization Objective organization If you wrote an application letter in which, after the introductory paragraph, you had a paragraph on your work experience and then another paragraph on your education, you would have used which of the following organizational approaches for the main body of the letter: Functional organization Thematic organization Objective organization One of the problems associated with application letters, discussed in this textbook, involves which of the following: Not providing enough specifics about your qualifications in the body of the letter. If you state everything in such general terms, you don't stand out as an individual. Providing too much specific detail. Specific details just lengthen the letter unnecessarily; it's better to state your background and qualifications in general terms. According to the textbook, the problem with stating something like "I am a quick learner and am experienced at handling multiple projects at once" is which of the following: It's just your opinion of yourself. Not stating this sort of thing directly, but describing work experience that proves this assertion is better. It's okay: in the application letter you can't include specific details about your background; you have to generalize. It uses "I"; it should be rephrased using the passive voice or "the writer of this letter." Remember: never use "I" in formal writing such as business letters or reports. Which of the following is the standard way to punctuate the salutation of the application letter (and for that matter any business letter) addressed to Joseph Smith: Dear Sir: Dear Sir, Dear Sir; Dear Sir. Dear Sir Above the body of an application letter (or any business letter) are which combination of components and in wich sequence: Date, inside address (your address), heading (recipient's address), and salutation Date, heading (your address), inside address (recipient's address), and salutation Date, heading (your address), inside address (recipient's address), and complimentary close Date, inside address (your address), heading (recipient's address), and complimentary close
Click here to send this information to your Online Technical Writing instructor.
Return to the table of contents for the Online Technical Writing Course Guide (the online textbook for online technical communication courses at Austin Community College and other institutions worldwide).