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Biblical Studies and Academic Writing

Biblical Studies and Academic Writing. Class 18 Drafting a Paper. Aim. At the end of this session you should: Know why you write Know how to draft a paper Know how to respond to a question. Outline. Why Write? Drafting a Paper Responding to a Question Pulling it Together. Why Write?.

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Biblical Studies and Academic Writing

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  1. Biblical Studies and Academic Writing Class 18 Drafting a Paper

  2. Aim • At the end of this session you should: • Know why you write • Know how to draft a paper • Know how to respond to a question

  3. Outline • Why Write? • Drafting a Paper • Responding to a Question • Pulling it Together

  4. Why Write? • You write to communicate • Your thoughts • To yourself • To others • Your reading • To yourself • To others • Your conclusions • To yourself • To others

  5. Why Write? • To communicate your thoughts • Reflections on what you have read • What you are thinking about something • May not be well thought out but is your own thoughts • What you have experienced • It is not right or wrong it just is • Where you are at so far in coming to a conclusion about something

  6. Why Write? • To communicate your reading • Also known as research • To demonstrate your understanding of what you have read • Should be structured and not random quotes on the topic cobbled together • To show you have read the expected material

  7. Why Write? • To communicate your conclusions • You have thought about something • You have read about something • What do you now think? • This may or may not be the same as when you started

  8. Why Write? • Sometimes to understand what you know about a topic • These are the writings you should not hand in • Rework them as these are for you only and not for other people such as your markers • There is a difference between writing to understand and demonstrating understanding • Know how you write

  9. Outline • Why Write? • Drafting a Paper • Responding to a Question • Pulling it Together

  10. Drafting a Paper • You need to know the following: • What is the expected format • What is the expected length of the paper • What is style of the paper

  11. Drafting a Paper • Expected formats vary • Essay • Introduction, Body, Conclusion • Discussion Paper • Body, Short Conclusion • Portfolio • Answers to specific questions • Book Review • Book Details, Review, Conclusion

  12. Drafting a Paper • The word, page or paragraph length • Affects how much you are expected to write • Helps you determine how much you should write on each area

  13. Drafting a Paper • Guidelines to use your words wisely • Essay • 10% Introduction, 80% Body, 10% Conclusion • Discussion Paper • 90% Body, 10% Short Conclusion • Portfolio • 100% Answers to specific questions • Book Review • (N/A) Book Details, 90% Review, 10% Conclusion

  14. Drafting a Paper • The style of the paper • Reflective • You usually can use the word “I” • Formal • You usually do not use the word “I” • The exception to this may be the Introduction or the Conclusion • Informal • You may use the word “I”

  15. Drafting a Paper • Guidelines to use your words wisely • Essay • Usually formal • Discussion Paper • Usually informal though may be reflective • Portfolio • Usually informal though may be reflective • Book Review • Usually formal

  16. Drafting a Paper • Create a structure • Use headings • You can delete them before you hand in the paper • These are for your benefit • Work out how many words in each section • Try and stick to this

  17. Outline • Why Write? • Drafting a Paper • Responding to a Question • Pulling it Together

  18. Responding to a Question • What are you asked to do? • For an example look at: • http://edorigami.edublogs.org/2010/06/01/evaluation-rubric-exemplars/ • Different styles of answers based on what is required

  19. Responding to a Question • What are you asked to do? • Look at the Harvest Form and Style Guide

  20. Responding to a Question • Make sure you cover all you are asked to complete • Multi-part questions require multi-part answers • Read the question (over and over) • Underline the important words • Circle the important concepts • In your structure do you address these?

  21. Responding to a Question • Your draft structure • The overall structure for an essay • Introduction • Body • Conclusion • The structure for the specific essay question • Introduction • Body • Part 1 of question • Part 2 of question • Part 3 of question • Conclusion

  22. Outline • Why Write? • Drafting a Paper • Responding to a Question • Pulling it Together

  23. Pulling it Together • When there is an introduction • It should say what you intend to do • When there is a conclusion • It should say what your writing decides upon • No new information • You are writing to understand when you add new information

  24. Pulling it Together • Alignment • Does your introduction say what the body does? • Does your conclusion say what the body points to? • Do the introduction and conclusion talk about the same material in the same way?

  25. Pulling it Together • Look at an assessment task from another unit • What are you being asked to do? • What structure should your answer have?

  26. Aim • At the end of this session you should: • Know why you write • Know how to draft a paper • Know how to respond to a question

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