Writing Process
Writing Process
2. Generate ideas. What kind of argument can you make about this topic or
with this evidence? What themes emerge from your readings or observations?
4. Gather information and organize your ideas to address all the points brought
up in your thesis statement.
6. Revise
6a. Revise
6b. Revise
6c. Revise
[Repeat steps 2-6 as necessary, in any order desired, until you attain a
satisfying result.]
Topic: Consider your own knowledge about, interest in, feelings for, and
thoughts on a topic as you decide whether / how to write about it.
Consider paper lengthMake sure your topic is sufficiently narrow to
allow you to develop a paper fully within the assigned page limit.
Generating ideas (Prewriting)
Brainstorming:
Proceed as when freewriting, but using phrases rather than sentences.
Try it individually or with a group.
Clustering:
Create a visual arrangement of ideas and logical connections.
Use it to narrow topics, locate ideas that need development, and identify
the logical and hierarchical relationships among ideas.
Keeping a journal Answering questions (ask who? what? when? where? why? of
your topic)
DURING writing: outline what you have written so far when you are stuck, or to
make sure you are staying on topic.
Dont begin at the beginning: start with the section/point that seems
easiest to you, work to the end, then write your intro.
Write quickly. Get your ideas down as quickly as possible, without
worrying too much about grammar, perfect word choice, spelling, etc.
Write strongly. Capture your initial passion and excitement about
the ideas, or else youll lose them. You can tone down your writing later.
Save all drafts and notes. Save both hard and electronic copies,
betting on the worst (it happens). Save multiple versions of your drafts, as you
may decide to revisit ideas youve already deleted.
When you take breaksfinish a section or try to exhaust your
current thoughts; if not, make notes about what you want to say next.
Write where you are free from distractions. Youll get more done in
two intense hours of work than in six hours of interruptions by friends, phone,
TV, email, etc. Dont waste your time.
Set deadlines, plan breaks, break up your work hours. Setting
aside a whole day to write a paper usually results in getting little donethe idea
of spending an entire day writing a paper is just too awful. Plan shorter work
periods with rewards at the ends of them. (Start early.)
When all else, fails, take a showeror do whatever makes your
brain juices flow. Run. Sing. Sniff a rotten apple.
Stages of REVISION
I. BIG STUFF: Thesis statement (clarity, location, effectiveness), logical
fallacies, assignment parameters
Stages of EDITING
I. Sentence faults (comma splices, fused sentences, fragments)
PROOFREADING
Check for format (spacing, font, margins, page numbers, etc.), spelling,
typographical errors, homonym mistakes, etc.