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Writing is a Process. Just as building doesn’t begin with a hammer, writing doesn’t begin with a pen. Both activities involve several stages- from the first idea to a finished product. Prewriting. The prewriting stage begins with selecting and exploring a topic.
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Writing is a Process Just as building doesn’t begin with a hammer, writing doesn’t begin with a pen. Both activities involve several stages- from the first idea to a finished product.
Prewriting • The prewriting stage begins with selecting and exploring a topic. • One useful technique is to search your memory for experiences you’d like to share. • Think about which ideas you’d enjoy writing about and which might interest others • Decide how to organize these ideas.
Drafting • When you draft, you turn your prewriting notes into sentences and paragraphs. • You arrange your ideas in the order you chose in prewriting. • New ideas will continue to come. • Write them all down. Some will work, and some won’t. • Your draft may look messy, but don’t worry. You can fix it later.
Revising • Step back and look over what you’ve written. • Read it aloud to peer reviewers. • Answer questions like the following: • Are your ideas clear? • Do they fit together? • What other details might help your readers understand and enjoy what you’ve written?
I felt nervous walking in that first morning. The halls were crowded. People seemed happy to be starting a new year. They didn’t seem to need to know a new person, and one from another country at that.
I felt nervous walking into Carver Junior High School that first morning. The halls were crowded. Friends greeted each other,people seemed happy to be starting a new year together. They didn’t seem to need to know a new person, andespecially one from faraway Japananother country at that. • Why do you think these changes were made?
Editing/Proofing • In the editing/proofreading stage, you examine each word, phrase, and sentence in your writing. • This is the time to find and correct any errors in grammar, spelling, and punctuation. • Your goal is to make a neat, error-free copy for others to read and enjoy.
Two-Minute Skill Drill • Write this sentence down on your sheet of paper: i haven’t ever tried cooking things. • First, REVISE this sentence (adding details.) • Now, rewrite the sentence with your revisions. • Lastly, EDIT this sentence (punctuation/grammar)
Publishing/Presenting • In the publishing/presenting stage, you share your writing. • You can read a report aloud in class. • You can work with others to publish a class poetry book. • You can write a letter to the editor of the school newspaper. • What other ways can you think of to share your work?
Be Flexible • Writing is a messy process. Ideas rarely flow in an orderly way. • Novelist James A. Michener once said, “I have never thought of myself as a good writer. Anyone who wants reassurance of that should read one of my first drafts. But I’m one of the world’s great rewriters.”
At any stage in the writing process, a writer can think of new ideas to include and better ways to say something. • Feel free to move backward and forward in the writing process. • For example if you get stuck while writing your draft, go back to prewriting and add to your notes. • In editing, if a sentence doesn’t say what you mean, return to drafting. If you have a new idea, insert it. • One of this writer’s best ideas about a small world came during a revision.
How wrong I was! The first surprise came when I met Ms. Osaka. I couldn’t believe that she’d moved here just a year ago from Kushiro, my native city in Japan. How wrong I was! The first surpriseicebreaker came when I met Ms. Osaka, the school librarian. I couldn’t believe that she’d moved here just a year ago from Kushiro, my native city in Japan. Immediately, I understood the meaning of the term “small world.” Why does the addition about the term “small world” improve the piece?