1 / 13

Graduate Writers’ Workshop Week 2

Graduate Writers’ Workshop Week 2. Writing Your Way to a Focused Research Question Dr. Erica Cirillo -McCarthy Assistant Director of Graduate and ADEP Writing. Today’s Workshop:. Revisiting the writing process: Invention, Drafting, Revision, Editing Writing as Inquiry

pabla
Télécharger la présentation

Graduate Writers’ Workshop Week 2

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. Graduate Writers’ WorkshopWeek 2 Writing Your Way to a Focused Research Question Dr. Erica Cirillo-McCarthy Assistant Director of Graduate and ADEP Writing

  2. Today’s Workshop: • Revisiting the writing process: Invention, Drafting, Revision, Editing • Writing as Inquiry • Recursive process of research, reading, and writing • CARS Model • Free writing/ Discussion

  3. Understanding the Writing Process • Invention • Drafting • Revision • Editing

  4. Writing as Inquiry • Writing to synthesize concepts • Complex writing takes multiple concepts and synthesizes them • Writing to map or organize concepts • In order for your audience to understand the relationship between concepts, you need to organize them (keep in mind the rhetorical nature of organizing) • Writing to extend concepts and ideas • Graduate writing builds upon existing ideas and concepts

  5. Recursive Process of Research and Writing

  6. INTRODUCTIONS • The Create A Research Space (CARS) Model (see Swales and Feak) • Move 1 Establishing a territory • Step 1 Claiming centrality (or importance, relevance, problematic) and/or • Step 2 Making topic generalization(s) and/or • Step 3 Reviewing items of previous research (obligatory)

  7. INTRODUCTIONS, CARS model cont’d • Move 2 Establishing a niche • Step 1A Counter-claiming or • Step 1B Indicating a gap or • Step 1C Question-raising or • Step 1D Continuing a tradition or extending previous knowledge (obligatory)

  8. INTRODUCTIONS, CARS model cont’d • Move 3 Occupying the niche • Step 1A Outlining purposes(obligatory) or • Step 1B Announcing present research (in some fields) • Step 2 Announcing principal findings (in some fields) • Step 3 Indicating Research Article structure (in some fields)

  9. Let’s take a close look at two published articles in Education and Organizational Behavior… • Justice, Christopher, James Rice, Dale Roy, Bob Hudspith, & Herb Jenkins. “Inquiry-based learning in higher education:administrators’ perspectives on integrating inquiry pedagogy into the curriculum.” Higher Education 58 (2009): 841-855. • Heath, Chip & Sim B. Sitkin. “Big-B versus Big-O: What is Organizational about Organizational Behavior?” Journal of Organizational Behavior 22 (2001): 43-58.

  10. Close reading will help you see the moves made in introductions • Read articles in your field’s top journals and see what moves scholars make as they create a research space • Try to emulate those moves • Do not try to reinvent the wheel – disciplinary conventions are there for a reason. You need to be able to recognize them and be comfortable recreating and adhering to the moves.

  11. Free writing exercise • Write about your research question including: • What brought you to your research? • What research are you aware of? Who are the scholars who do this type of research? Where do they publish? • What research do they (the above scholars) rely on? • How will you add to the discussion or conversation surrounding your research topic?

  12. Discussion/Questions

  13. Thank you! • References • Stripling, Barbara K. "Inquiry-based Learning." Curriculum Connections through the Library. Eds. Barbara K. Stripling and Sandra Hughes-Hassell, Ann Arbor: Libraries Unlimited, 2003. • Swales, John M. & Christine B. Feak. Academic Writing for Graduate Students: Essential Tasks and Skills. Ann Arbor: Univ. of Michigan Press, 2004.

More Related