1 / 25

Writing Academic Essays:

Writing Academic Essays:. Skills for Success Workshop 4, 2011. Deep learning: Write your way to Understanding. Academic essays help you to learn and demonstrate your understanding of complex subjects Your writing should be rigorous, systematic, and honest.

lily
Télécharger la présentation

Writing Academic Essays:

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. Writing Academic Essays: Skills for Success Workshop 4, 2011

  2. Deep learning: Write your way to Understanding • Academic essays help you to learn and demonstrate your understanding of complex subjects • Your writing should be rigorous, systematic, and honest. • Questions must be answered with integrity: support your work with reliable references

  3. Referring to Others’ Work • Your work must be supported by reliable evidence. So, where do you get it? • You’ll get evidence from the research work of others • Evidence from the work of others must always be acknowledged

  4. Finding the evidence: Where do you get it? • Search first in your Subject Outline, read your lecture notes, find the texts recommended by lecturers. • In the recommended texts – look in the reference list to find more information. • Look in journals, CD ROMs, Internet sites, newspapers, DVDs, recommended readings

  5. Ensure evidence is relevant • Read evidence quickly – find keywords that connect the text to the essay question • Look in journal articles: summaries, introductions, conclusions. • Scan tables of contents or indexes of books • Limit your reading, read quickly first time • Make sure to record reference details

  6. Accept expert help! • Find information and authors who support your argument • Acknowledge the source! • If quoting directly, identify the author • If paraphrasing & summarising, identify the author.

  7. Gain power and strength from references • Allow time to read widely before you write; • Record text details accurately as you read and attach them to your notes; • Is the text relevant? Know exactly what you want, make a list of keywords for this topic; • Your references to the work of others helps to demonstrate your understanding; • Good quotations strengthen your argument; lead readers into quotations smoothly.

  8. Time Frame: how long will it take?How long is a piece of string? • Gathering information, takes about 60% • Writing drafts & final copy takes about 20% • Reviewing, checking/editing/proofreading 20% • For a 2,000 word essay allow yourself 10 hrs of work. • Use the calendar to plan your work life • If you can do it today, do it!

  9. Write your way to understandingRemember: • “I don’t know what I think till I see what I wrote”. • (Graham Wallas, 1954) • Writing lets you and your assessor know what you understand • When you write thoughtfully about a topic you’ll know more about the topic when you’ve finished writing • Writing is a very scary activity; but go on, do it anyway! Nobody can do it for you!

  10. Written arguments • Academic writing usually takes the form of an argument that attempts to persuade your reader • An argument interprets a point of view & is supported by evidence - it is not aggressive • Comment on the evidence, analyse the evidence and reach a conclusion – based on the evidence • Make the point, give example(s), offer analysis, make comment, reach a conclusion.

  11. Structure of Academic Papers • Introduction, establishes the main theme of the argument by making the thesis statement which explains how you interpret the question. • Body of the paper expands on major issues, offers examples, supported by evidence, presents analysis. • Conclusion summarises everything presented, synthesises and makes a final statement

  12. Argument, not assertion • Point • Evidence or Examples • Analysis P.E.A.

  13. The Point P.E.A. • this is what the paragraph about, and is sometimes called a topic sentence • the point takes the reader to the next stage of your argument. • your main points are introduced in your introduction. Pick them up in the same order in the body of your essay.

  14. Evidence and examples P.E.A. • this is material that supports the point of the paragraph • is appropriate to your discipline

  15. Analysis P.E.A. • ties your paragraph together • explains how and to what extent your evidence supports the point You will • explore implications of data • interpret data • question arguments of others • challenge the validity of assumptions . . .

  16. Example • Insert example of a paragraph written in the P.E. A. model here.

  17. Unity and cohesion Unity: each paragraph is concerned with a single idea Cohesion: ideas flow logically from each other

  18. Unpacking Questions • Find the Keywords, they are the signposts that direct your reading • Understand what you need to do, look at the directions that inform you by suggesting actions, such as: Defining, explaining, illustrating, summarising, tracing, researching. Or by seeking out relationships such as: Comparing, contrasting, applying, causing, relating

  19. Still unpacking • An essay question may ask you to interpret by: • Assessing, justifying, evaluating/responding, supporting, synthesizing, analysing, arguing. • These tasks require you to offer an opinion supported by evidence. • Use examples, principles, definitions and concepts from research to interpret the case

  20. Planning • Freewriting: write for 10 or 15 minutes about the topic – just write down everything that comes to mind in a continuous text. Stop, read it and marvel at what you’ve written! • Unscramble the question: “Is there a connection between childhood obesity and TV viewing?” • Ask the WH questions: What is obesity? How can tv influence obesity? Who agrees? Who doesn’t? Why focus on children? Where does this happen? When did this happen? • Make a list of everything you know about each of the keywords/phrases: childhood obesity/ childhood tv viewing

  21. More Planning • Take 3 different perspectives on the topic: • Describe it – what are its components in detail? • Follow it through time: what’s the history of this phenomenon? Are there changes? Why? • Map it: take the words from your list, plot them on a map, draw a wild diagram, key issue at the centre, make connections, have clumps of ideas, identify main themes, minor themes

  22. First Draft (cont.) • Place the question and your interpretation of it in front of you • Write your thesis statement: TV watching has much less influence on childhood obesity than heredity • Write the introduction – last • Body: first paragraph or two may explain why folk jump to the easy conclusion that watching TV makes babies fat

  23. First Draft (cont.) • Now refute paras 1 & 2 in paras 3 & 4 (+ more if necessary) all supported by evidence. • Paras 5 & 6 analyse the situation described above in 1,2,3,4, + • Finally: para 7 comment & summary, mostly your ideas with less evidential support because you’ve already given that • Para 8: Finish with concluding statement, mostly you, but with support from someone really substantial in the field. (Now take a break).

  24. Final Draft (cont.) • Read through what you’ve written – try reading the text aloud • Ask someone (friendly) to read it • Change anything and everything you don’t like – listen to your writing friend’s advice and try some of her/his suggestions • Use the magic of the computer, cut, paste, reorganise – get it sorted so that it flows • Final check

  25. Final Editcheck for: • Grammar (grammar check) • Sentence structure/paragraph structure • Spelling (spell check + friend) • Punctuation, capital letters, quotation marks • References: in text and reference list (has its own page) • Layout: double space, 3cm margins, word count, cover sheet, your name, number etc • Now submit it!

More Related