Wednesday 27 August 2014

Six Stages of the Essay Writing Process - 1


Stage One: Getting ideas

For an essay, your aim is to persuade or inform your readers about the topic, so you want to end up with ideas that will persuade or inform. Where do you start? Should you find out about the topic by doing research first? But how do you know what you need to research? Like so much of writing, it’s a chicken-and egg sort of thing. The thing is not to worry about whether you’ve got a chicken or an egg. You need both and it doesn’t matter which you start with. The place to start is to put down everything you already know or think about the topic. Once you get that in a line, you’ll see where to go next. Don’t worry yet about your theme or your structure. You’re not writing an essay yet—you’re just exploring. The more you explore, the more ideas you’ll get, and the more ideas you have, the better your essay will be.


Making a list

Writing an essay takes several different kinds of skills, but the first one is easy. We can all write a list. Start the list by writing down the most important word or phrase (the key word) from the assignment, then putting down every thought that comes to you about it.

Making a cluster diagram

A cluster diagram is really just another kind of list, but instead of listing straight down the page, you list in clusters around a key word. Think of the spokes of a wheel radiating out from the hub. Something about the physical layout of a cluster diagram often makes it easier for ideas to start flowing. You can jump around from cluster to cluster, adding a thought here and a thought there.

Researching

When you write an essay, you’re usually expected to find out what other people have already thought about the subject. Your own ideas are important too, but they should be built on a foundation of what’s gone before. You don’t have to reinvent the wheel. Since most essays rely on this kind of foundation, you need to know how to do it properly. I’ll take a moment here to talk about how to research (otherwise known as independent investigation). Research is about getting some hard information on your subject: actual facts, actual figures. The sad thing about research is that usually only a small percentage of it ends up in your final draft. But like the hidden nine-tenths of an iceberg, it’s got to be there to hold up the bit you can see. You often research several times during the writing process. The first time you mightn’t know exactly what you’ll be writing about, so research will be fairly broad-based. As the essay starts to take shape, you’ll have narrowed the topic down. At that stage you might research again to find specific details.


How do you research?

First you have to find your source of information. You might look at books, journals, videos, newspapers, on the Internet, on CD-ROM. You go to reference books like dictionaries and encyclopedias. You might also do your own research: interviewing people, conducting an experiment, doing a survey. In the case of my topic, reading the novels themselves is research (the novels are ‘primary sources’), and so is finding anything that critics or reviewers might have said about them (these are ‘secondary sources’).

A word about acknowledgement

Because you’re piggy-backing on other people’s work, you have to let your reader know that—to give credit where credit is due. You can do this either in the text of the essay, in footnotes or in a list of sources at the end. Once you’ve found your source, you can’t just lift slabs of it and plonk them into your essay. You have to transform the information by putting it into your own words and shaping it for your own purposes. An essential first step in this process is taking notes. If you can summarise a piece of information in a short note, it means you’ve understood it and made it your own. Later, when you write it out in a sentence, it will be your own sentence, organised for your own purposes.

How to take notes

Before you start taking notes, put a heading that tells you exactly what the source is. This means you can find it again quickly if you need to and you can acknowledge it. In the case of a book, you should note the name of the author, the title of the book, the date and place of publication, and the page or chapter number. The call number (the library number on the spine) is also useful. (It’s tempting to skip this step, and I often have. The price is high, though—frustrating hours spent flipping through half-a-dozen books looking for one particular paragraph so you can acknowledge the source of your information or find some more detail.) With the net, make sure to bookmark interesting or relevant pages visited.

  • Use the table of contents and the index to go straight to the relevant parts.
  • Skim-read to save time once you’ve got to the relevant parts.
  • Write down the main words of the idea with just enough connecting words for your note to make sense.
  • Put only one point per line.
  • Sometimes turning the information into a diagram is the best way to make notes.
  • Put your notes under headings so you can see the information in bundles. Often, the research is already organised under headings: you can just copy those.
  • If you can’t see how to reduce a big lump of research to a few snappy lines, try the ‘MDE’ trick: find its Main idea, then its Details, then any Examples.
  • Develop a shorthand that works for you—shorten words (for example, char. for character), use graphics (for example, sideways arrows to show cause and effect, up and down arrows to show things increasing or decreasing).

The cheat’s note-taking

People often ‘take notes’ by highlighting or underlining the relevant parts of a book or article. This is certainly easier than making your own notes, but it’s not nearly as useful. The moment when you work out how to summarise an idea in your own words is the moment when that idea becomes yours. Just running a highlighter across someone else’s words doesn’t do that—the idea stays in their words, in their brain. It hasn’t been digested by you.


Freewriting

Freewriting is just a fancy word for talking onto the page—a way of thinking aloud about the topic in an unstructured way. It’s like the ‘free association’ exercises that psychologists use: it’s just nonstop writing. The reason freewriting works is that you can let your brain off the leash for a while and send it out to find ideas. Ideas are shy little things and they won’t come if you try to bully them, or if you keep criticising them. The important thing with freewriting is not to stop and think. Just keep the ideas flowing out the end of your pen onto the page. It’s true that your essay needs to be thought-out and planned, and it will be. But this isn’t the essay—this is just another way of getting ideas for the essay. There’s a time to question whether these ideas are useful. But that time isn’t now. Now is the time to invite in any ideas that may happen by.

20 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    Replies
    1. You have posted this on the wrong thread.

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    2. I laughed when I read her comment then read your comment Sire

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  2. I know that every single one of my essay writing is awful; I have never been able to grasp the concept on how to write down a good essay. This has been proven since I was in elementary school, my writing score, even in Indonesian, only climb a good few steps over the standard; which is not satisfying enough for me. I have tried a couple of the steps you put on the topic, making a use of cluster diagram and researching. I kind of doubt cluster diagrams helped me, I think it is a good method for revising subjects you don’t quite get, but for adding a thought here and there on my writing; never work the way I want to. In contrast, I found researching very useful, because you can compare the comments on an article and the article itself. Based on that, I generate my own comment, however; it is just a thought in mind, to change that thought onto words on a paper is a whole different dimension on its own.
    I also have been trying to use the punctuations that Mr. Adrian has taught us, but I just could not think of the right time to pour them in. On this topic, I tried to squeeze in several semi colons, despite knowing you expect my comments to be on its best state. Thus, if any of those is incorrect, please comment on it, Sir.

    Oza

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  3. I’ll try to do a lot of free writing in my free time. And I think it is the most important step to do for a better essay production. From doing a lot of free writing, I can know what kind of repetition I do most, and what kind of small mistake I do often.

    I make a short story when I try to do some free writing. Maybe a one shot of short fiction story. It is because I like to write a fiction, that I like to spend my time doing a free writing. I have a lot of short fiction pile up in my private folder. Most of it is adaptation of my life. What happen to me at one bad day, I try to make a story about it. It is helping me relax, and off course help me craft my writing skills. It is like killing two birds with one stones!

    I recommend all of my friend here to do a lot of free writing, because it does help!

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  4. The worst thing for me when I want to write something: Research. Maybe because I'm just so lazy to do it. Back when I was Senior High (SMA) I often research for my essay, assignments, or tasks that are given and when I search the keyword on the Google search engine. BAM! Lots of sources that sometimes unrelated appear on the first page. Tips from me when you wanted to do research on Google: Narrow your idea to the most possible details or Google will screw you up, Search at Google Scholar because it consist of research results and published writings from all around the world.

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  5. I actually didn’t write that much and don’t know how to properly start an essay. But I write things randomly, a lot. When I met a friend, he asked me “do you know about free writing?” I answered “no” and then he shows me how and what the essence of free-writing is; to take all of what’s in our mind on to a page, by writing nonstop. I think it’s similar when I try to randomly start writing on to a page. But he said that free writing will help us to think moderately on how we write and what to write; how to spontaneously think about the writing structure, how to put on a perfect word in a sentence, etc. But it still not enough, we cannot just practice and rely on free writing, we also have to research on the topic which we try to write, also we can make a cluster diagram so we can get a better perspective on what to write. Still, my writing is not good, so I need to practice more.

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  6. What an useful tips, Sir. To be honest, I'm so lazy when I have to do some research. Even if I search it through google, I still have to filter the information. That's why I prefer to freewriting because I just write whatever that pops out in my head.

    I used to do freewriting, just like Aditya. I write some short stories but currently I'm losing my spirit to write. Maybe this has been happening since about two or three months ago. I don't know but after I opened the MS Word, I just stared at the sheet blankly. I ran out of words. I guess this is caused by I haven't read many novels yet unlike I used to.

    I think reading could help our writing skill, whether it's writing essay, story, or whatever. When we read, we catch many new vocabularies, and learn more about grammar. Well, I have train myself more to write as much as I possibly can.

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  7. I think the hardest part of writing essay is generating ideas. Almost all essays are similar; the difference is only the content. When I’m trying to generate some ideas, I’ll stop my work for a while and think what ideas I should write. When I read this tips, somehow it helps me how to generate more ideas. I know that most of my essays are not that good, but I’m trying to improve it.
    Besides generating ideas, researching, I think is my weakness as well. Sometimes I just don’t know what research that I need to get or search. A good essay must have a good content that’s mean that a good research needs to be conducted. With strong content people will easily understand what the essay is all about. So, I think this tips are really helpful and I hope it will help me as well to improve my essay.

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  8. Good night everyone, I would like to give my comment regarding to this topic.
    First of all, I would like to thank Mr. Adrian for posting this topic. From this topic I may learn how to make essays the way it should be done. And this topic is very useful, especially, because we will have an examination on Saturday, and from reading this topic alone, we may study. The most important and I think some of us, when write the essay, usually forgot to write “this essay will show” part. Well, I personally almost always forgot to use that part. And now, after reading this topic, I may not repeat that same mistake again. I also couldn’t be more agree with the “Highlight” part, because it really helps to gain myself a focus on the important part to write the essay. And determination also comes next I guess, because you cant make a good essay without determination.
    I guess that’s all, thank you.

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  9. Good afternoon everyone, I would like to make a comment about this topics, I think this blog post is very helpful for us who are not very good in writing. And it is very helpful because we are going to face the final exam in Saturday, and it is about writing essay. And I am one of those who are not very good in writing essay. One of the hardest part in writing essay in my opinion is generating ideas. Some times when I given a topic, and I have to make an essay out of it one of the most hardest part is generating ideas. Because in generating ideas we have to do brain storming and think very carefully about what we want to write in to the essay. And one of the most laziest part in making an essay is doing research because we have to search from the internet, from many references.

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  10. Getting ideas... It's a nature of writing. For me, the idea I get came from something I find interesting. Not from opening up every single book and read a bleak black typed-words to find the information or ideas I might be seeking, but just from any memories that surfaced in my mind. If I need to make sure, then I just have to open up references. I've been training up this skill from writing some short stories that I keep myself, and have my teacher on my private lesson to criticise it. For most of the time, what I did is doing freewriting. Some story that I write do have a name which is associated with its history, then I need to make sure the name works like the recorded history for my story.

    Well, it's my story writing, for essay, the most difficult part for me is actually generating ideas. You don't really want to use a common ideas for an essay, but you also don't want the ideas you get lacks the data you may need, so either way, the research is going to be tough. As for the others, it's a cakewalk as it should be, but just keep it connected to the idea. With rough and difficult ideas, It will be a walk to a pothole, where when you get through it, you may gone astray.

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  11. I think this blog post is very useful for me. Honestly speaking, I am a very bad writer. When I want to write report, essay, etc I usually just do it in one trial. I keep writing it with only the help of my mind. As the result, I always end up my writing such as report, essay, etc in circle. When I made report for my school work, I always try to find many sources from internet and books. But after getting all those useful resources, I always find it hard to edit the sentences into my own sentences that easier to understand. Sometimes I just copy the sentences and give the credits in the end of the sentences or at the back page (references).
    About the freewriting, I think it is a good idea. But somehow, my hand always freeze when I want to do freewriting by myself. I think I need more practice of freewriting to pull out some ideas from my mind.

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  12. I believe one of my weakness in writing skills is generating ideas. My high expectation for myself to make an ideal essay might be a barrier. Sometimes it makes me taking a longer time to thinking about the ideas. Thus, I am not very comfortable to write essays in a few limited amount of time. Based on my experience by contributing to this blog, it makes me realize how hard it is to keep making an effective good writing. Usually my point of view on commenting the article and the way I wrote it would be just almost similar with all my previous comments before. But then I also realized it is probably because I lack of doing researches about the information that could supporting my ideas. Reading couple of writing tips in this blog really help me to find way to improve my writing skills. It is true that by taking notes would help us to brainstorming more ideas. And then we can arrange the ideas and form it into a better paragraph to read.

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  13. I think this is the first and probably the most important part to start a good essay. The idea we will choose will determine the rest of the processes. Actually, this part makes me think in a very long time, so I tend to spend a lot of time in this section. And I think this is a weakness of many people in making the essay. They are puzzled to determine the topic or idea that will be in their essays. I try to implement some theories in an essay making process while I am writing something. The usual thing I do is brainstorm; with it I tried to link topics, experience, and the fact that I have ever known. After that, research supports me in giving evidence and the facts very well. With all the data and information available, we can construct a list of all that we know and determine whether we are going to use the topic or not. Brainstorming, research, and list it. I think these three steps are really helpful in an essay making process.

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  14. I think piling up ideas is a fundamental step in the writing process. We should analyze the question and see it in a bigger perspective, but not too big until it lost the original purpose of the question. Before Mr. Adrian introduced us the best ways to generate ideas (all depends on the individual), I never made outlines or make cluster diagrams for my essays in high school. Our teacher never actually mentioned it, so I never thought about it. It does help me to make further research about ideas that I have no or little knowledge about. Making lists of key words and then writing other key words that has a similarity or have a connection to it. I sometime ask myself question, and I found it more satisfying to do that rather than just making the list. Cluster diagrams need a lot of space, but it gives us an advantage because we can imagine more clearly about what we are going to write.

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  15. Nice post! Begin the writing process by writing an outline. Make sure your outline touches on every aspect required per the instructions. Write your essay by elaborating on each of the points in your outline. Use clear, concise and simple language throughout the essay.

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