The strategy I use for quick writing is starting with an outline. While I'm outlining my paper I ask my self: What are you going to say? Will it be relevant to your topic? How long do you want to make this paragraph?, etc. It helps me come up with coherent sentences and without noticing I put everything in orderly fashion for myself. Another strategy that I use is as soon as I understand my assignment I write what is on my mind. I don't recommend it for everybody because it is messy but it's great for me. It allows me to see what I know and understand. When I'm finished I then go back and proofread my assignment and began to dissect it. I take some sentences out completely or move them around within the paragraph that gives it the best fit.
Are these myths bias or are they true? In Irvin's essay, "What Is “Academic” Writing?" he outlined and debunked 7 myths that most high school and college students were made to believe as they evolved as writers. The Myths Are: Myth #1: The “Paint by Numbers” myth Myth #2: Writers only start writing when they have everything figured out Myth #3: Perfect first drafts Myth #4: Some got it; I don’t—the genius fallacy Myth #5: Good grammar is good writing Myth #6: The Five Paragraph Essay Myth #7: Never use “I” Most of these myth's I have personally never heard of but I just can't agree with myth #1. The myth is described as "writers believe they must perform certain steps in a particular order to write “correctly.” Rather than being a lock-step linear process,-". Maybe it's just me being stubborn but I've always been taught to follow an evidence triangle or some type of layout when I wrote essays and it made it a little more easier an...
Great post! An outline is good strategy for writing quickly and in order.
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