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A rough draft is "a late stage in
the writing process". It assumes that you have adequate
information and understanding, and are near or at the end of gathering
research.
What you need:
- Adequate time period
for focus
- Clear study area
to eliminate distractions, whether other school projects or
friends' demands,
in order to concentrate on the task at hand
- Notes on ideas
to include from your research
- Target audience
or a clear idea for whom you are writing:
your professor, an age group, a friend, a profession, etc.
- Preparation and research
with as much current and historical data and viewpoints as
necessary
- Review
all the above. Don't
"study" it; just refresh yourself on the main concepts
for now
What you will not need:
- Title or introduction:
derive these from your rough draft
- Reference works, print-outs, quotes,
etc.
Rely on your notes, and don't overwhelm yourself with facts.
Details can be added; you now want to focus on developing your
argument
- Edits!
Do not revise as you write, or
correct spelling, punctuation, etc. Just write, write,
write. This is the first draft, so what you put down will be
revised and organized "after"
Prewriting:
Prewriting exercises provide key words,
meaning, and structure to your research before you write, and may
overcome "writers block." They help you
- Focus intellectually
clearing distractions while opening your mind to ideas within your
subject
- Narrow and define topics for your paper
beginning the process of
translating research into your own words.
- Develop logical or architectural
structure to topics you have identified.
This provides a visual and verbal document for reaction,
review, discussion, and/or further development in your rough
draft. However, these exercises are dynamic or subject to
change in the actual writing process as you understand, develop,
and build your argument. Some topics will go, some will
stay, some will be revised
- Provide a context for "project management"
to further define the topic, set timelines, identify gaps in
information, etc.
Four exercises in
prewriting:
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Focused Free-writing:
- Use a blank paper or computer
screen and set a time limit
of 5 - 15 minutes
- Summarize the topic in a phrase
or sentence;
generate a free flow of
thought
- Write anything that comes
to mind, whether on topic
or off, for the period of time you chose,
- Don't pause,
don't stop.
don't rush; work quickly
- Don't review
what you have written until you have finished
- At the end of your time,
refer back to the beginning:
Rephrase the initial topic
Repeat a word, phrase, or important thought or emotion that
makes sense.
- Review:
are there words or ideas you can grab onto for the topic?
Is there a main idea to this sequence of ideas?
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Brainstorming:
- Use a blank paper or computer
screen and set a time limit
of 5 - 15 minutes
- Summarize the topic in a phrase
or sentence;
generate a free flow of
thought
- Write down everything
that comes to mind to generate a free flow of thought:
- Think of ideas
related to this topic, the crazier the better:
be wild and amuse yourself; eliminate nothing
- Make up questions and answers
about the topic, no matter
how strange: Why am I doing this? What could
be interesting about this to me? Why don't I like this?
What color is it? What would my friend say about
it?
- Review:
are there words or ideas you can grab onto for the topic?
Is there a main idea within this sequence of ideas?
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Mind-mapping
- Think in terms of key words or
symbols that represent ideas and words
- Take a pencil (you'll be erasing!)
and a blank (non-lined) big piece of paper or use a
blackboard and (colored) chalk
- Write down the most
important word or short phrase or symbol in the center.
Think about it; circle it.
- Write other important words
outside the circle.
Draw over-lapping circles to connect items, or use arrows to
connect them
(think of linking pages in a web site)
Leave white space to grow your map for
- further development
- explanations
- action items
- Work quickly
without analyzing your work
- Edit this first phase
Think about the
relation of outside items to the center,
Erase and replace and shorten words for these key ideas
Relocate important items closer to each other for better
organization
Use color to organize information
Link concepts with words to clarify the relationship
- Continue working outward
Freely and
quickly add other key words and ideas (you can always
erase!)
Think weird: tape pages together to expand your map;
break boundaries
Develop in directions the topic takes you--don't bet limited
by the size of the paper
As you expand your map, tend to become more specific or
detailed
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Listing
and outlines
This is a more structured and
sequential overview of your research to date. You may also
outline to organize topics built from free-writing,
brainstorming, or mind-mapping:
- Arranges items or topics, usually without
punctuation or complete sentences
- Lists topics and phrases them in a grammatically
similar or parallel structure (subjects, verbs,
etc.)
- Sequences topics in importance,
defining what "level" of importance they are.
Items of equal importance are at the same level
Example (using
this web site):
Study Guides
& Strategies
I. Preparing to learn
- Learning
to learn
- Managing
time
- Setting
goals/making a schedule
II. Studying
- Thinking
critically
- Memorizing
- Organizing
projects
III. Writing Essays
- Basics
of essays
- Prewriting
- Definitions
- Basics of
prewriting
- Exercises
- ...
- Rough drafts
- definition
- basics of drafts
- exercises
- ...
- ...
- Types of essays
- The
five paragraph essay
- Essays
for a literature class
- Expository
essays
- Persuasive
essays
-
....
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Take a break!
Refresh yourself
- Review the ideas, topics, themes,
questions
you have come up with in your prewriting exercise. Try
reading the prewriting text out loud ( a type of self-mediation).
Listen for patterns that seem most interesting and/or important.
Summarize them.
- Evaluate the ideas, topics, themes,
questions
whether by scoring, prioritizing, or whatever method seems best.
Keep this list in case your first choice's) don't work
- Sequence what you have prioritized as
in outlining, above.
Study Guide Index
See also:
Rough drafts:
Learning Skills
Center, University of Texas - Austin, How to Write and Revise a
Rough Draft, http://www.utexas.edu/student/lsc/handouts/1234.html
Academic Resource Center, Sweet
Briar College, Tips for Writing Rough Drafts http://www.arc.sbc.edu/roughdraft.html,
Free-writing:
Boelsche, David, Toward an
Understanding of Free-writing, http://www.as.ttu.edu/Courses/5360/papers/boelsche1.html,
Learning Skills Centre, University
of Northern British Columbia, Free-writing, http://quarles.unbc.ca/lsc/freewrit.html,
Brainstorming:
JPB Creative, The Step-by-Step
Guide to Brainstorming, http://www.jpb.com/creative/brainstorming.html,
Outlines:
Dr. Bruce R. Thompson, Milwaukee
School of Engineering, Creating An Outline, http://www.msoe.edu/~thompson/outlines.htm
Purdue
University Online Writing Lab, Developing an Outline, http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/general/gl_outlin.html
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