prewriting starting your paper copyright lisa mcneilley, 2010

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Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

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Page 1: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

PrewritingSTARTING YOUR PAPER

COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Page 2: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Value of Prewriting

Only takes a little time

Allows you to approach your paper with the confidence that you have enough to say

Helps avoid problemsWriting a paper without enough information,Writing a paper without a plan,Writing a paper and realizing too late that it

won’t suit the assignment.

Page 3: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Techniques

Eventually choose your favorite, but try as many as possible, includingBrainstormingClusteringFree writingAsking QuestionsCreating a Sensory Image

Page 4: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Brainstorming

Generate a list of ideas.

Turn off your internal critic. List ideas in any order.There are no bad ideas.

Sometimes one not-so-good idea will lead your mind to a great idea.

Page 5: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

After Brainstorming

Select what works, and omit what doesn’t.

Group related ideas. A strategy that works well is to color code ideas, so that one group of related ideas is green, another blue, etc.

Write a topic sentence for each group of ideas. Put that topic sentence at the top of a page Do additional brainstorming on each subtopic until

you have generated enough to offer substance in your paper.

Page 6: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Clustering

Clustering is a way of listing ideas and keeping related ideas together.

Start with a core idea—the topic of your paper—at the center of the page and branch out into groups of related ideas.

Take the central idea of each branch and start a new cluster to develop each idea in more depth.

Page 7: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

After Clustering

Review your clusters and eliminate those that don’t work.

Decide on an order for the clusters.

Each cluster will become a subtopic for your paper, so write a topic sentence for each.

Page 8: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Free writing

Write down any ideas you have about your topic as they come to you for a designated time (about 10-15 minutes).

If you come to a point where you don’t have more to say, keep repeating a word or phrase until a new idea occurs to you. Just keep writing.

Page 9: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

After Free Writing

Review your text and highlight key ideas.

Take each of those ideas and put them at the top of a new page and free write for 10 minutes on each.

Then use color coding to highlight related ideas. Group the related ideas and develop topic sentences that will correspond to the points in your outline.

Page 10: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Asking Questions

Who? What? Where? When? Why? and How? These make a good starting point for any writing.

Generate a list of questions you would like to know about your topic.

Then write a list of questions that a reader will need answered.

Page 11: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

After Asking Questions

Remember, though, it is not enough to ask the questions; you have to do the research and thinking to answer them in your paper.

Choose what answers you will incorporate into your paper.

Organize the answers to fit your outline.

Page 12: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Creating a Sensory Image

Your goal is to show your topic to make it more true for a reader and to get your reader emotionally involved.

Imagine yourself in the situation you are describing. Take an inventory of your senses: sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch—and your sixth sense, emotion.

Page 13: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

After Creating a Sensory Image

You will probably generate more detail than you need.

Once you have generated as much material as possible, you can select what you will actually use.

Look for patterns and determine a purpose or overall effect that you want to achieve.

Page 14: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

After Creating a Sensory Image

You should select details that enhance your purpose and eliminate those that detract or distract from them.

Organize your points to fit your outline.

Page 15: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Tips as You Finish

Generate more ideas than you need to have a lot to choose from.

Use your prewriting to direct you to a thesis.

Use this as an opportunity to look at your topic from different angles and to make new connections.

Page 16: Prewriting STARTING YOUR PAPER COPYRIGHT LISA MCNEILLEY, 2010

Tips as You Finish

Group related ideas into subtopics that you can use in your outline.

Return to prewriting activities if you run out of ideas as you are drafting.