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Preparation for writing Lynne Kerfoot Centre for Student Skills and Access
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Overview Break down essay writing into manageable parts Time planning Essay titles (what do they mean?) Splatter notes (brainstorming) Research
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Pre-writing: break it down 1.Time planning 2.Review the question/title 3.Brainstorm ideas 4.Research
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Time planning Get a wall planner, calendar or diary. Mark down all your commitments. How much free time do you have?
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Time planning Make a note of the submission date Plan backwards from the deadline Allocate time for the tasks involved (research, drafting, proofreading, printing etc)
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Essay titles Take your time, read through it several times Speak it out Look for key words. Make sure you understand what they mean Pay special attention to instruction words
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Instruction words Often have specific meanings in academic assignments E.g. ‘Discuss’ “Write about the most important aspects of something (probably including criticism) give arguments for and against; consider the implications of.” (Cottrell 2003)
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Instruction words If you’re not absolutely sure about the meaning of the instruction word – check! E.g. study skills books
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Assess the view that developments in technology over the last hundred years have made life too easy. (Reproduced from Jeanne Holloway’s The Learning Kit)
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I need to…explain the word technology. I need to…decide what the phrase too easy means here. I need to…identify a number of key developments in technology over the past hundred years and explain how they have affected our lives.
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I need to…work out the arguments for and against the view I’ve been asked to assess. I need to…reach a decision on the comparative merits of these arguments.
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Your turn Now do the same thing with your own essay
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Tips to get started Turn it into something that’s yours...re-phrase it Make it less intimidating. Put it on a big piece of paper – stick it on the wall. Change the texture, the colour, the feel of it.
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Splatter notes Record what you know about the topic Write as many ideas as you can Quantity of thoughts, not quality ‘Splatter’ all ideas on paper Identify what you know – and what you don’t Organise and sort these ideas
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Splatter notes activity
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Research Define the search (What are you looking for?) Identify key words/synonyms Read and evaluate material Record useful information Reference the source
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Review Essays can be broken down into a series of manageable tasks Plan your time Analyse your essay title Make splatter notes Start your research
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Further reading COTTRELL, S. The study skills handbook. Second edition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; 2003.
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