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Center for Project Management: Responding Academically to TMAs. Lawrence Cleary, Patricia Herron, Dr. Íde O’Sullivan, Research Officers for the Regional Writing Center, UL. Material Covered. Writing Satisfying Academic Audiences Understanding and Addressing an Academic Assignment
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Center for Project Management: Responding Academically to TMAs Lawrence Cleary, Patricia Herron, Dr. Íde O’Sullivan, Research Officers for the Regional Writing Center, UL
Material Covered • Writing • Satisfying Academic Audiences • Understanding and Addressing an Academic Assignment • Essay Writing
Writing • What is writing? Define ‘writing’. • What are its components? • What forms can writing take? • What are its stages of development?
Ways of Ordering • Writing Process—Planning, Drafting, (Discussing / Consulting), Revising, Editing and Proofreading. • Rhetorical Situation—Occasion for writing, writer, topic, audience and purpose. • Writing Strategies—cognitive, metacognitive, affective and social.
The Rhetorical Situation • Occasion • Writer • Topic • Audience • Purpose
Me, an Academic Writer? • When given an ‘academic’ writing assignment, or any kind of writing assignment, what are your immediate feelings and thoughts? • Freewrite • Write for five minutes without stopping • Private writing
Freewriting • Write for 5 minutes • In sentences • Without stopping • Private writing -- no one will read it • Write about about paper topic or sub-topic • Like brainstorming in sentences • Structure and coherence not required • Explore many angles, do ‘open’ writing (Murray 2006)
Satisfying Academic Audiences When someone says academic writing, what features characterize that kind of writing for you?
Academic Writing • Complexity • Formality • Objectivity • Explicitness • Hedging • Responsibility
An Academic Assignment • Topic? • Aspect or focus? • Instruction or comment? • Scope? • Viewpoint?
Writing Prompt Given what you have learned about the assignment question, how will you approach this essay? What will you do first? What then? Include thoughts on what you think you might read? What aspects of your organization might come into your essay?
Generative Writing • Same as freewriting, but more ‘closed’. • Generative writing exercise focuses on one part of your writing assignment. • To be read by ‘writing buddy’; ask for specific feedback.
Essay Writing • Purpose: • to persuade using appeals honored by academics • to explore and explain your understanding of change in the work environment
Essay Writing • to explain and argue, for or against, the reductionalist versus the systemic approach to future management problem solving • to use, if appropriate, your existing organisation as an example for such an application
Organization and Structure • Preliminaries—Title page • Body Text • Introduction • Main body • Conclusion • End Matter—References/Works Cited page
Reporting • Summaries • Quotes • Paraphrases
Works Cited • Bryde, J.D. (2003) “Modelling Project Management Performance”. International Journal of Quality& Reliability Management 20(2): 229-254. • Critical Thinking—Demo, Center for Teaching Excellence, University of South Florida (2005) “Bloom’s Taxonomy Pyramid” [online], available: http://www.cte.usf.edu/materials/institute/ct/index.html [accessed: 15 Aug. 2008]. • Ebest, S.B., Alred, G.J, Brusaw, C.T. and Oliu, W.E. (2005) Writing from A to Z: The Easy-to-use Reference Handbook, 5th ed. Boston: McGraw Hill. • Murray, R. (2006) How to Write a Thesis, 2nd ed. Maidenhead, England: Open University Press. • Senge, P.M. (1990) The Fifth Discipline: The Art and Practice of the Learning Organization. London: Random House. • UEfAP.com (2008) Writing: Rhetorical Functions, Comparing and Contrasting Exercise 2 [online], available: http://www.uefap.com/writing/exercise/function/compcon2.htm [accessed Aug 16 2008].