Write Well in Less Time - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Write Well in Less Time

Description:

A writer is not so much someone who has something to say as he is someone who ... to create disciplines for myself, ones that were quilt-making when ignored. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:72
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: JoeMo5
Category:
Tags: less | quilt | time | well | write

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Write Well in Less Time


1
  • Write Well in Less Time
  • Joe Moxley
  • Professor of English
  • University of South Florida
  • http//www.usf.edu/writing

2
Workshop Goal
  • Help you enjoy writing and achieve your writing
    goals in less time.

3
A writer is not so much someone who has something
to say as he is someone who has found a process
that will bring about new things he would not
have thought of if he had not started to say
them --William Stafford
4
Workshop Document Freewrite
  • What attitudes and habits enable you to achieve
    your writing goals? In turn, what attitudes and
    habits interfere with your success as a writer?

5
When first developing a project, model the
behavior of successful writers
  • Play the believing game (as opposed to the
    doubting game). While composing, ignore negative
    thoughts (such as, I dont have enough time, this
    is a stupid idea, the professor will hate this).
  • When the negative thoughts are crippling,
    critique them in double-entry format. Visualize
    success.

6
Understand Composing Processes
  • Different products involve different processes.
  • Different personality styles have distinct
    composing patterns
  • Understand your own strengths, weaknesses,
    proclivities as a writer

7
Diagram of Composing Processes
Prewriting
8
Wisely Manage Your Composing Processes
  • Balance prewriting with writing and revising
  • Do not edit early drafts
  • Be flexible about how you write. For example,
    prewrite before researching organize after
    prewriting.

9
Wisely Manage Your Composing Processes
  • Stop writing at reasonable intervals.
  • Timely stopping is more difficult and important
    than starting. Without the skill of stopping on
    time, writers cannot become productive workers
    who enjoy writing. Why? If they cannot break
    the momentum of busily, urgently doing things
    that hold them in a trance-like state, writers
    cannot begin (or end) writing sessions on time.
    And if they cannot stop writing when they have
    done enough for the day, before diminishing
    returns set in, they make writing aversive and
    more difficult to resume on the next scheduled
    occasion. (--Robert Boice)

10
Wisely Manage Your Composing Processes
  • Establish priorities and act accordingly.
  • Structuring your time without being tense about
    it helps writers find additional time to work and
    play. And more. If you work with a sense of
    structured routine, with a present-orientation
    (cf dwelling on missed opportunities), with
    effective organization, and with persistence, you
    will be more likely to display higher
    self-esteem, better health, more optimism, and
    more efficient work habits. Without learning
    the language of time, you risk depression,
    psychological distress, anxiety, neuroticism, and
    physical symptoms of illness. Clearly, writers
    must learn to deal with time. (Robert Boice)

11
3. Wisely Manage Your Composing Processes
  • Log time spent researching and writing.
  • I started keeping a more detailed chart which
    also showed how many pages I had written by the
    end of every working day. I am not sure why I
    started keeping such records. I suspect that it
    was because as a freelance writer entirely on my
    own, without employer or deadline, I wanted to
    create disciplines for myself, ones that were
    quilt-making when ignored. A chart on the wall
    served me as such a discipline, its figures
    scolding me or encouraging me. (Irving Wallace)

12
Sample Log
  • Keep a daily log of
  • new words written
  • class of writing (1, 2, or 3)
  • description of activities
  • description of goals (people to contact, revising
    goals, research goals)

13
3. Wisely Manage Your Composing Processes
  • Practice Patience.
  • Avoid rushing, trying to do too much at one time,
    bingeing.
  • Take deep breaths. Give your eyes a rest. Walk
    away from the computer every 30 minutes and
    stretch.
  • Reserve your most energetic time of day, if
    possible, for writing.

14
3. Wisely Manage Your Composing Processes
(Continued)
  • Break documents into manageable sections.
  • Establish due dates for first, second, and
    subsequent drafts.
  • Write when you are sick and tired.
  • When all else fails, freewrite about your process
    and establish reasonable contingencies.

15
Practice Prewriting Strategies.
  • Give Sufficient Time to Prewriting/Planning
  • Freewrite
  • Read/Research
  • Discuss the matter w/peers mentors
  • Construct an Outline or Issue Tree
  • Dictate
  • Complete a Document Planner

16
Use a Document Planner
  • Tentative Title/Subject Line ______________
  • Establish a Reasonable Schedule
  • Due date for conducting necessary background
    research
  • Due date for networking with appropriate resource
    people
  • Due date for writing first draft of document
    proposal
  • Due date for receiving criticism from peers and
    supervisors
  • Due date for writing second drafts of document
  • What economic factors impinge on how this project
    will be developed or received?
  • Final due date

17
Use a Document Planner (Continued)
  • Purpose Clearly define your purpose in as
    narrow of terms as possible.
  • Audience Profile
  • What do you know about your audience?
  • What do you want your reader to do, understand,
    or feel? What does your reader know about your
    subject?
  • What counterarguments or questions should you
    anticipate?
  • Rhetorical Relationship What is your
    relationship to this audience? As a consequence,
    what voice/persona should you project?
  • Boilerplate/Discourse Conventions What standard
    questions/issues are you expected to accommodate?

18
Use a Document Planner (Continued)
  • Persona/Voice
  • Boilerplate/Discourse Conventions What
    methodologies/authorities/questions/issues are
    you expected to accommodate?

19
Use a Document Planner (Continued)
  • Status of Scholarship What important articles
    have been written about this topic? Where have
    these texts appeared? What new ideas can you
    contribute to this scholarly conversation?
    Briefly describe your informative or persuasive
    purpose.
  • Methodology What procedures and methods will
    your audience find credible? What methodology
    seems appropriate to yourself, your subject, and
    your audience?
  • Length and Format How long can your project be?
    What figures and tables or other formatting
    techniques are commonly used? What form of
    documentation is required (MLA? APA? The Chicago
    Manual of Style?)

20
Enough prewriting! Get writing! Engage the
generative nature of language
  • Freewrite Trust the generative process of
    writing. Keep perfectionist tendencies in check.
    (Remember Fluency precedes correctness)

21
Enough prewriting!
  • The positive force is the surprise of discovery.
    Writers are born at the moment they write what
    they do not expect. . . . They are hooked
    because the act of writing that, in the past, had
    revealed their ignorance, now reveals that they
    know more than they had thought they knew. --
    Donald Murray.

22
Revise Your Work Play the Doubting Game
  • Perceive revision to be a creative and inevitable
    process.
  • Solicit critiques from your peers before
    submitting work and before conducting research.
    Once you submit a piece and have it rejected,
    learn from rejection.

23
Revise Your Work Play the Doubting Game
6. Revise Your Work Play the Doubting Game
  • Systematize how you revise documents.
  • Provide the evidence, examples, and logical
    connections that readers need to follow your
    story

24
7. Edit Documents for Results
25
8. Learn from Critics, Rejection
26
Dont Let Rejection Beat You
  • Solicit as much criticism as possible. In a
    peculiar way, criticism looses its venom when
    taken in large dosages. And, of course, if you
    risk rejection on ten projects, sooner or later
    one of them will be accepted, thereby rescuing
    your pride!

27
Dont Let Rejection Beat You
  • Dont take criticism personally. Focus on the
    positive. Dont waste your energies writing to
    editors and telling them why they were fools to
    reject your ideas. Instead, place your energies
    into moving forward. Either immediately revise
    the manuscript or send it back out for
    consideration elsewhere.

28
Dont Let Rejection Beat You
  • Dont accept everything you hear. Ignore the
    cranks. Like bad drivers, there are too many
    cranks for you to police.
  • Be your own worst critic. No one will take your
    work as seriously as you do.
  • Dont try to critique your work at the last
    minute.

29
Dont Let Rejection Beat You
Dont Let Rejection Beat You
  • Be realistic. Remember its much easier to
    criticize than invent. Every manuscript can be
    critiqued, even ones authored by major scholars
    and researchers.

30
Sample Publication Timeline
  • Published without revisions as the lead article
    "Reinventing the Wheel or Teaching the Basics?
    College Writers' Knowledge of Argumentation."
    Composition Studies 212 (Fall 1993) 3-15.
  • The Writing Instructor, University of Southern
    California/. Los Angeles, CA, August 17, 1991.
  • Journal of Teaching Writing. Indiana University
    English Department, Indianapolis, Indiana, March
    26, 1990
  • Research in the Teaching of English, State
    University of New York at Albany, Albany, New
    York, January 12, 1990
  • College Composition and Communication, NCTE,
    Bowling Green, Ohio, November 6, 1989
  • Journal of Teaching Writing, Indianapolis,
    Indiana, June 28, 1989
  • College Composition and Communication, National
    Council of Teachers of English, Findlay, Ohio,
    August 2, 1988

31
Sample Publication Timeline
  • JAC, July 5, 1988
  • Journal of Basic Writing, The City University of
    New York New York, New York, January 14, 1987
  • Journal of Basic Writing, April 28, 1987
  • Rhetoric Review, Southern Methodist
    UniversityDallas, Texas, February 10, 1986
  • Research and Teaching in Developmental
    Education,Niagara University, New York, October
    31, 1986
  • Written Communication, University of Texas,
    Austin, Texas, September 15, 1985
  • College English, Indiana University, Bloomington,
    Indiana, February 26, 1985

32
Workshop Document
  • Draft a Document Planner
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com