Notes on the Process of Writing
Created by Karen Coda
Content available at her website
None of the information below is of my own mind. I am simply supplying the content and weblinks for you from her site. PDF version available here. All credit belongs to Karen Coda.
While writing is not strictly linear, we can visualize it in a structured progression towards a final product for ease of study and discussion.
Planning Drafting Revising
We can consider the writing process as a series of activities grouped into stages of development leading to the completion of a written product.
I. Planning Stage: Discover and Develop Ideas
- Select and Limit Your Topic
- Prewriting Strategies
- Brainstorming/Listing
- Clustering/Mapping
- Reporter’s Formula/Journalist's Questions
- Free-writing
- Journal keeping
- Prewriting Strategies
- Determine Your Purpose
- Assess the writing situation
- Product Specifications
- Assignment Criteria
- Creative Goals
- Overall general purpose
- to inform (understand)
- to entertain (understand & react emotionally)
- to persuade (understand & agree)
- to activate (understand, agree & take action)
- Central Controlling idea (specific to message)
- Clarify point/topic & subtopics
- Supported Thesis statement: T P S S S
- Assess the writing situation
- Analyze Your Audience
- Create a Profile
- Age
- Gender
- Cultural/Ethnic background
- Education level
- Economic/Social background
- Concerns/Needs
- Desires/Goals
- Understand Human Needs (Maslow's Motive Needs)
- Engage Reader
- Use Persuasive Devices
- Use Introductory Hook
- Create a Profile
- Develop Ideas
- Write a discovery draft (crummy first draft) to generate material
- Conduct research via formal or informal methods
- Incubate Ideas
- Organize Ideas
- Determine appropriate order
- Create a keyword outline for essay
II. Drafting Stage: Organize and Develop Writing
- Select appropriate expository techniques
- Description-use imagery
- Narration-tell sequence of events
- Illustration-use examples
- Definition-identify criteria
- Process Analysis-examine steps to completion
- Causal Analysis-examine cause/effect
- Comparison-identify similarities
- Contrast-identify differences
- Persuasion-appeal to emotions
- Argument-appeal to logic with evidence
- Convert keyword outline to a full-sentence outline
- Paragraph Types
- Special
- Introductory
- Transitional
- Concluding
- Topical
- Body
- Write a Working Draft
- Fill in details, evidence, examples as needed
- Develop wording of ideas
- Craft sentences and paragraph structure
- Select appropriate document format
- Essay (English papers use MLA style guidelines)
- Report
- Memo/email
- Letter
- Presentation
- Web design
- Promotional ads/brochures/flyers
III. Revising Stage: Examine and Evaluate choices that shape writing
- Global Revisions
- Use checklist for global revision
- Purpose and audience
- Focus
- Organization
- Content
- Point of view
- Paraphrasing, quoting & documenting sources
- Qualities of Effective Writing
- Order
- Unity
- Completeness
- Coherence
- Concision
- Writing Assessment
- Use S-I-I method
- Use Essay Evaluation form or a grading rubric
- Use specific assignment criteria
- Use checklist for global revision
- Local Revisions
- Major Illiteracies
- Sentence Fragment
- Comma Splice
- Fused Sentence
- Agreement
- Modifiers
- Sentence Variety
- Coordination
- Subordination
- Sentence Types
- Simple
- Compound
- Complex
- Compound-Complex
- Word Choice (colorful, colored, colorless)
- Tone
- Voice
- Denotation
- Connotation
- Proofreading (isolation method)
- Format
- Spelling
- Punctuation
- Typing
Quick Links
- Writing Resources
- Strategies for Essay Writing
- How to Read an Assignment
- Moving from Assignment to Topic
- How to Do a Close Reading
- Overview of the Academic Essay
- Essay Structure
- Developing A Thesis
- Beginning the Academic Essay
- Outlining
- Counterargument
- Summary
- Topic Sentences and Signposting
- Transitioning: Beware of Velcro
- How to Write a Comparative Analysis
- Ending the Essay: Conclusions
- Revising the Draft
- Editing the Essay, Part One
- Editing the Essay, Part Two
- Tips on Grammar, Punctuation and Style
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