Transcript Slide 1

ACADEMIC WRITING
October 30, 2013
ALL GOOD WRITING
• Is well-organized, with main ideas introduced early on
and defended, complicated, and refined throughout
• Is coherent and unified
• Explores and explains worthwhile content
• Is aware of its audience
• Explains the significance and importance of ideas
• Demonstrates good mechanics (grammar, spelling,
punctuation)
COMMON
PROBLEMS
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Broad topic
Unclear thesis
Not enough specific detail
Indirect
Not enough analysis or evaluation
Memorizing
Unclear connections
Plagiarism
OUTLINE
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Questions, topics, answers
Expectations
The writing process
Resources on campus
QUESTIONS vs.
ANSWERS
• Topic: what you’re writing about.
– Canadian content regulations
– The role of MCH nurse in raising developmentally delayed
children
– The effects of globalization
– Causes of climate change
– Alternative medicine
• Thesis: your argument and what you think, overall,
about the topic or question.
TOPICS/QUESTION
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• Broad topics lead to confusion, unclear theses, and
complicated research.
• Focus the topic:
– Will help you find, select, and effectively use sources.
– Having a narrowed topic will help you develop your thesis.
• How?
– What interests you? What do you have an opinion about?
– Find something manageable, relatively easy to research, with
enough resources to work with.
– Ask questions.
NARROWING YOUR
TOPIC
• Can you look at the causes of the topic?
• Can you look at the effects?
• Are there different definitions of the topic? Or has a
definition of the topic changed over time?
• Are there any unresolved issues or controversial points?
• Narrowing by time and geography is also helpful.
• Topic = problem or question
• Your essay will answer the question, propose a solution,
or argue your thesis
– Your solution or argument will be a single sentence
1) How can the problem be resolved?
2) What can you recommend?
EXPECTATIONS
What is expected
of my writing?
- Original Thinking
- Strong Analysis
- Beyond the 5-paragraph
Essay
- Proper Referencing &
Formatting
- Grammar & Spelling
ASSIGNMENTS
• Will vary by field, faculty, project, and assignment
specifications
– Research Study
– Argumentative
– Exploratory
• What is included will also vary
• Original contribution to knowledge
EXPECTATIONS
Original Thinking
• To many readers, an essay is “thought made visible”
– How sophisticated is your thinking?
– Want to see you USING concepts and ideas (not just
stating or summarizing)
– What do you think about the ideas?
– How can you connect different ideas?
– So what?
CRITICAL
THINKING
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What are your ideas?
What does the information mean?
How can you connect two or more ideas or findings?
How have you evaluated the findings?
Does your essay argue a new idea, solution, or
perspective?
• Do you clearly explain and support your ideas?
WHY?
• Shows you can:
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Identify/define problems
Generate questions and hypotheses
Review and summarize the literature
Apply appropriate methods
Collect data properly
Analyze and judge evidence
Discuss findings
Produce publishable results
Engage in a sustained piece of research or argument
Think and write critically and coherently
• Creating this will involve:
– Critical thinking
– Thorough research
– Effective writing style and organization
ACADEMIC
INTEGRITY
• You are expected to know how to
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Paraphrase
Summarize
Quote
Reference
• Plagiarism: presenting the work or ideas of someone
else as though they are your own.
• You must reference ANY idea that is not your own fact,
analysis, idea or thought!!
REFERENCING
RULES
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Use the system required by your field, faculty, or
assignment.
If in doubt, reference.
If it sounds like the original author, it is the original
author: Quote it instead!
Reference each and every instance when you use the
idea/author (that may mean every sentence).
EXPECTATIONS
Beyond the 5-paragraph
Essay
• Structure & Organization
• New idea: new paragraph
• Flow between paragraphs; proper transitions
– Each paragraph/idea should be connected to the one before it
and after it
• Introductions
– Catch reader’s interest: why is the topic important? What’s
interesting about it?
– Your first sentence should introduce the topic.
– Get to the point: what’s your thesis? What support will you be
using?
– Keep it short and concise
• Conclusions
– Summarize the argument
– Where do you go from here?
Creating an Outline
• Will help you to
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Divide and organize ideas
Develop a point of view
Establish scope
Sequence points
Develop a writing strategy
• Work out general plan first; then make the outline more
specific
• Use the outline to write your introduction
EXPECTATIONS
Referencing & Formatting
• Which style are you using? (APA, MLA, Chicago Style,
Vancouver Style?)
• Style affects referencing, page formatting, structure,
spelling/grammar
• Consult the style guide for specifics
• Online:
• OWL Purdue: http://owl.english.purdue.edu
• Refworks: http://www.refworks.com/
RESEARCH
RESEARCH
Why?
• To become aware of current knowledge in your field
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Who are big names?
Major theories?
Studies?
How will existing literature contribute to your work? How will you
use it?
– Criticisms?
– What’s missing?
• To contribute new knowledge
– Seeing what is already there will help you find what isn’t
RESEARCH
Consider
• You might be acting on existing knowledge or adding to it
• Will support your ideas by showing:
– you understand what you’re doing
– how you’re doing it
– how your research ties into the context of your field
HOW TO
RESEARCH
• Use databases on the McMaster library site
• Do not (just) use the Internet
• Keep looking; don’t settle for the first materials you
find
• At the end of your research, be prepared to print more
materials than you will wind up using
• Select by reading abstracts for relevance to your topic
and interests
• Ask for help from a reference librarian or another
classmate
HOW TO READ
• Don’t just read for facts
• Critique each article by asking What? How? How
well?
So what?
• Use the materials you find (scholarly evidence) to
make your point
• Be prepared to discuss conflicting views and try to
show your decision-making process in choosing
among them
WRITING RESEARCH
NOTES
 Immediately after reading an article
 One page (usually)
 In your own words
Your research summary should answer the following questions:
What: What is the thesis of this piece? What does it claim?
How: What methodology is used? What school of thought?
How well: How convincing or problematic do I find the study?
So what: How does it fit in with the other readings?
USING
EVIDENCE
• Evidence comes in four forms:
• Authorities on the subject
• Examples: your own or others’
• Statistics
• Reasons: your assessment of a case and of the materials you
have read on the subject
• Remember you will need to use this evidence: it does not speak for
itself
• One of your jobs in the essay is to teach the reader about what you
found and why you found it convincing
• Paraphrase the evidence (put it in your own words)
WHEN TO CITE
 Do not use quotations except in rare cases to define a
word, or to quote some elegant phrases or terminology
exactly
 If you borrow ideas, you must cite them, just as you
would cite facts, statistics, etc.
 Do not worry that there are too many references to
sources, provided you use them to make your point
 If readers would ask, “How do you know this?”, you must
include a citation
WRITING STYLE
UNDERGRAD &
GRADUATE
WRITING
Undergrad Writing
• Mechanically correct
• Concise
• Clear (though not
necessarily interesting)
• May or may not demonstrate
new ideas
• Contains citations when
required
• Uses transition words
• Written for a general
audience or for person
marking
Graduate Writing
• Mechanically skillful
• Concise though also nuanced
• Engaging, stylish, and
interesting, and speaks with
your own voice
• Explores a topic in a new way
• Demonstrates extensive
research
• Has a strong organizational
frame
• Moves from point to point in
the way you want your
audience’s thoughts to move
• Written for a professional
TIPS
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Be direct and concise
Avoid metaphors or mystery
Provide detail
Explain your ideas and what they mean
Explain the significance and implications
Use specific support – not generalizations
Make clear, linear connections
Cite your sources
LAYERS OF
EFFECTIVE WRITING
Content
& Ideas
MAKING IT EASIER
The Writing Process
THE WRITING
PROCESS
• Breaking an assignment into chunks helps you to...
– Reduce anxiety
– Eliminate procrastination
• Spreading out your work over time allows you to...
– Get some distance from your work which allows you to see it
more clearly
• Interacting with your own work gives you...
– The confidence to add, delete, move or change materials as you
go along
– A paper trail to show your progress, to seek help, or to use to ask
for a brief extension
• Sample: Madman, Architect, Carpenter, Judge
THE WRITING PROCESS
Madman
• Your experiences or ideas about an issue or topic
• Your review of the research you found on the topic
• Could be:
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Notes notes notes
Mind map, concept web, etc.
Free-flow writing
Verbal diarrhea
• Remember to cite everything!
THE WRITING
PROCESS
Architect
• Your outline or plan for the paper
• In what order will you make your arguments?
• Develop themes, finding evidence from various sources
to support ideas
• Remember: every idea in your essay must relate to your
thesis or argument, and each paragraph must connect to
your thesis
THE WRITING PROCESS
Carpenter
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You have your ideas and plan: now build it
This is your first draft – for your eyes only
Use an outline and keep it visible on your desk
Refer to your research notes
Write out your ideas; don’t worry about how you say
them
THE WRITING
PROCESS
Judge
• The paper has been planned and built; now it’s time to
make it pretty.
• This is your final draft and preparation of the paper with
the reader in mind.
• Evaluate clarity, flow, organization, spelling, grammar,
formatting, etc.
• Learn the difference between editing and proof-reading.
EDITING
Ask yourself:
• Does it follow the guidelines for the assignment?
• Does my introduction get to my topic in the first
sentence? Does it have a thesis? Does it say how I will
prove my thesis?
• Does my conclusion rephrase my argument and key
points?
• Does each paragraph have a topic sentence?
• Does each paragraph deal with only one main idea or
point?
• Refer to the assignment’s grading rubric or specific
requirements
NEED HELP?
Student Success Centre
• Writing Assistance
– Office hours throughout the week
– Book appointment through OSCARplus:
• ‘Appointments’  ‘Student Success Centre Appointments’  ‘Academic
& Writing’
Graduate Studies
• Writing Circles (http://graduate.mcmaster.ca/currentstudents/academic-resources/graduate-student-writing-circles.html)
Online
•
OWL Purdue: http://owl.english.purdue.edu
•
http://studentsuccess.mcmaster.ca/
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