1 / 19

What is Writing?

What is Writing?. Different types of writing Novels Articles Textbooks Poetry Plays Essays. Genre. Who are you writing for? Your teacher? Yourself? A publisher? Specific group of people? Artificial audience or real?. Audience. Why are you writing? An assignment? Personal?

afya
Télécharger la présentation

What is Writing?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. What is Writing?

  2. Different types of writing • Novels • Articles • Textbooks • Poetry • Plays • Essays Genre

  3. Who are you writing for? • Your teacher? • Yourself? • A publisher? • Specific group of people? • Artificial audience or real? Audience

  4. Why are you writing? • An assignment? • Personal? • Publication? • Persuading, Informing, Storytelling? • To say something? Purpose

  5. What form does the work take? • Formulaic and predictable? • Content dictates form!! Structure

  6. Introduction • 3 body paragraphs • Conclusion • Why do we teach this? • How do you learn to let go? Formula “Essay”

  7. Simply trying out an idea • (Academic 5 paragraph is just a way to package it neatly and assess it quickly for standardization) • Essays come in many shapes & sizes What is an essay?

  8. What you say dictates the form & number of paragraphs • Opening section • Supporting section • Closing section • YOU determine this! REAL Essays

  9. Writing is not “magic” that just happens. It is hard work that requires practice! • Linear “textbook” process vs. “Real” / recursive process HOW do writers write?

  10. Prewriting (notes, webbing, charts) • Rough Draft (write it out) • Revise (make changes) • Edit (fix mistakes) • Final Draft (print it out) “Process” as you know it

  11. Rehearsal • Initial writing / Drafting • Rereading • Revision • Recursively – All happen repeatedly How “Process” REALLY works

  12. Any work that is preliminary & has potential for ideas • Includes the unwritten thinking, planning, wondering • “Failure Free” – nothing really invested here but time and thought • Also includes notes you make in any form you like Rehearsal

  13. Just put the ideas down in a reasonable order • Give details through elaboration • Let the things you need to say to accomplish your purpose & suit your audience take you “away” Initial Writing

  14. Read your piece OUTLOUD • If you have time, give it some time. • Read Like a Writer • Critically examine what you wrote • Do NOT be afraid to change • REALLY make changes if needed – changes in what you “say” Reread

  15. Vision • Envision • Visionary • Re-vision CONSIDER MEANING

  16. Listen to the piece • “Play the reader” • Chop it, slice it, dice it • Revision is not about answers (right vs. wrong), but possibilities • NOT for errors (but fix them too) Revision

  17. When the writer is completely satisfied with what has been said and the way it has been said • Rereading and Revision can Cycle over & over & over & over & ..well, you know… When is writing done?

  18. Turn in a polished copy of a piece of writing that you can be proud of. • One that says something significant in a way that reads well and shows you are confident in your message. • Check for technical errors to show your attention to detail. “Teacher-Ready”

  19. Risk is inherent in writing. To write well, you have to be willing to be a bit vulnerable, to be receptive to feedback, to take a leap of faith. TAKE THE RISK – I DARE YOU!!! Risk

More Related