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The two extremes to balance between. It should all come easy
E N D
1. Beginning the Research Analysis Paper Is
actually
easier
than
you
think!
2. The two extremes to balance between It should all come easybut it doesnt
Clear ideas and sentences seldom come on their own.
You THINK that
you dont have anything to say
Its hard to start
The ideas are complex and contradictory The paper writes itselfno problem?
This is the product of free-writing
A valuable stage, but not an acceptable draft!
The idea may be good, but scattered
Full screen, but ideas may be underdeveloped or disconnected
Looks very careless
3. First PLAN then WRITE to save yourself the heartache (or confusion and sleeplessness) later ?
Dont stress about
complete sentences
grammar or punctuation
judging your ideas
Flirt (gradually focus) with the topic
*Do not start a paper by writing the paper*
No need to get stuck on a paper by trying to write the perfect first sentence
After you brainstorm, you can outline and add complete sentences.
4. Where to begin... Think about what why youre writing:
To offer an argument and DEFEND your claim by using REASON.
To prove that you understand the material and youre able to THINK CRITICALLY about it
And that you can form an OPINION or TAKE A STANCE about it yourself
5. Brief Overview of the Writing Process PLANNING
-assessing writing situation
-brainstorming
-outlining
DRAFTING
-intro and thesis
-body
-conclusion
REVISING
-higher-order & lower-order concerns
-proofreading
6. Getting Started ~ Planning Make sure you UNDERSTAND the question and what exactly is being asked.
Write a short summary / sketch / GENERAL IDEA of what you want to say.
Be able to say what you want about this topicwhat EXACTLY are you planning to address?
Decide what you will say FOR and AGAINST your idea (or claim, if youve already made one)
Brainstorm!!!
Any number of various activities used to generate many creative ideas that have no right or wrong answers and are accepted without criticism
7. Brainstorming. . . Take advantage of your thoughts; gather your brains energies in a storm
Some techniques:
Free-writing
Breaking down the topic into levels
Bullets/lists
Cubing
Clustering/mapping/webbing
Relationship between the parts
Journalistic questions
Speaking and recording
Dictionaries / thesauruses / encyclopedias
8. Free-writing Put pen on paperand write. Dont stop even if you believe you are saying nothing.
Why: it frees your internal critic. When you arent worrying about style, spelling, grammar, or punctuation, you can think about other things.
Pages later, there will be a lot of filter and fluff, but also a lot of potentially thought-provoking ideas
9. Breaking down the topic Progressing from a general ? specific idea (also helps pinpoint a potential argument or thesis statement)
General topic
i.e. Aristotles Metaphyisics, Book A, the account of wisdom
Specific sub-topic or required question
i.e. Wisdom as the science of first causes and principles
Single phrase or term that your statement revolves around
i.e. The search for the good in the whole of nature
10. Listing ~ Bulleting Jot down lists of words or phrases that pertain to your topic.
Again you can base your lists by brainstorming on the general, more specific, or most specific ideas/terms
Note comparisons and contrasts, or analogies (part-to-whole, etc).
11. Cubing Like a cube, this approach is 6-sided.
Consider the topic and respond to these:
Describe it
Compare it
Associate it
Analyze it
Apply it
Argue for and against it
Do you spot any correlations between your answers, or patterns, or new ideas?
12. Clustering/ Mapping/ Webbing Jot down as many phrases or terms jump into mind when considering a topic.
When youre done, link similar ideas together, forming a web/map amidst the chaos. Look for some logical relationships between these clusters, and keep going until youve found some sort of pattern or flow of ideas.
13. Relationship between the parts Whole
Part
Part
Part
Parts
Parts of parts
Parts of parts
Parts of parts
14. Journalistic Questions Who?
What?
When?
Where?
Why?
How?
15. Speaking and recording Turn to your friend, your roommate, or your mirror, and say what youre trying to write.
Dont even pick up the pendont even worry about writing. Many people freeze up at the mere idea of a waiting, blinking cursor.
Just turn on the cassette, and record your voice!
Oral free-writing; there will be plenty of filler and fluff, but also some precious ideas you wont have to remember all by yourself
16. Dictionaries, Thesauruses, and Encyclopedias When all else fails
Visit the library, writing center, or browse online to look up your terms.
Obscure, archaic definition may address a terms ambiguity or dynamic meaning, possibly giving you new ideas
An encyclopedia is may help to clarify facts, get quick background, or discover a thorough context
17. Now what? So your desk is overflowing with sheets of diagrams, definitions, lists, and cassette tapes (sort of)
Sort it out with an OUTLINE
Now focus on assembling your thoughts.
Decide what is most important
Identify information gaps
Or write a SKETCH
Write out larger chunks (clusters of sentences or paragraphs) to expand upon your smaller clusters and phrases.
This is the foundation for your draft, blocks you can later thread together with further ideas and transitions
18. Outline = A general plan of the material to be presented in your paper.
Why write one?
Organization (order, importance, relationship/relativity)
Less work later
Ideas, like a puzzle, best arranged on table, not floor
Example of a simple outline
I. Intro
II. State Socrates argument
III. Offer my objection
IV. Consider a possible reply by Socrates.
V. Offer a counter-reply.
Etc
19. Steps in writing an outline Do your research
Gather the brainstormed ideas
Come up with a tentative thesis statement
Determine the papers audience and purpose
Intelligent but not as knowledgeable in this field
To inform and persuade
Choose the outline structure
Write the main categories
And subcategories
And tertiary categories (etc, as needed)
20. Order of the outline There are many ways to arrange the different parts of a subject.
chronological arrangement
spatial arrangement
i.e. ranking of arguments
from the general to the specific.
This means you begin with a general idea and then support it with specific examples.
the most common ordering type
21. Types of outlines The two main types of outlines are the topic outline and the sentence outline.
In the topic outline, the headings are given in single words or brief phrases.
In the sentence outline, all the headings are expressed in complete sentences.
Generally easier to read and more comprehensive
22. Formatting the outline (example)
The basic format uses an alternating series of numbers and letters, indented accordingly, to indicate levels of importance
Example:
I.
A.
B.
1.
2.
a.
b.
II.
A.
B.
23. This outline should specifically identify: What issues and questions do you plan to cover in each part of your paper?
What works and parts of works do you intend to discuss in each part of the paper (not set in stone, but at least initial plan)
What some of the arguments may be, or what will need to be discussed/argued
A tentative bibliography of primary and secondary sources
Primary: the original text
Secondary: materials that provide interpretations, analyses, explanations, critiques, restatements and descriptions of primary sources
24. Final tips ~ Remember, the planning process is the most versatile
you can always change your ideas, arguments, or even thesis along the way, as long as you can SUPPORT them with relevant arguments and sources
Your paper depends on it! A good outline enhances the organization and coherence of your paper.
The outline can help you organize your material, stay focused, be clear, discover connections between pieces of information that you weren't aware of, make you aware of material that is not really relevant to the purposes of your paper, help you fill in gaps, etc.
A bit of planning now will save you a lot of stress and cramming later!
25. Helpful Resources http://www.unc.edu/depts/wcweb/handouts/brainstorming.html
http://trc.ucdavis.edu/bajaffee/NEM150/Course%20Content/brainstorming.htm
http://www.albany.edu/eas/170/outline.htm
http://www.wikihow.com/Write-an-Outline
26. Thats all ~ Thanks! ?