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6:40am
I’m writing this article before I’m ready, in order to show how
it works. I’ve been re-reading books by Robert Boice lately, and the
ideas in this article come from his books. Even though I haven’t read
them in a week or two, I’m going to get my thoughts down first. Then
I’ll post this on my website as an example of the first stage of writing
before you’re ready.
Has this ever happened to you?
Write Before You're Ready: First Steps to Avoiding Writer's
Block
Oh no; it’s happening again!
You just sat down to write. In the
back of your mind, you know what you want to say. But as you stare at
the computer screen or your pad of paper, you realize that you probably
haven’t checked out all the literature on this subject. Furthermore,
you’re not really clear about some of the articles that you’ve
read. Perhaps you wonder if you really have anything to say after all.
So you decide to go back to do some more research, take some more notes,
and check out a few more sources. Eventually, though, you find yourself
back at the keyboard. Somehow you can’t find a way to express those
thoughts that were so clear when you were researching. Every sentence
that you write sounds banal, weak, obvious or boring. "I’m
not in a creative state of mind,” you think. "I’d better
wait until I have a bigger block of time” or "I’d better
wait until I’m in the mood.”
The cycle continues, as you try to get clear in your mind what your
thoughts are. Eventually you grow to dread the process of sitting down
to write, and you think of yourself as a procrastinator.
Many writers get caught in this endless cycle.
Is there a way out? One way is to practice what Robert Boice suggests
in "Advice
for New Faculty Members” and in "Professors
as Writers.” What he suggests is: write before you’re ready.
By observing "exemplar” new professors, and teaching their
techniques to struggling professors, he found that blocked writers can
be taught to write more easily. Here are the first few steps of his technique.
Pre-writing
In this stage, which might last a week or two, you spend 10 to 15 minutes
per weekday writing, sketching out, taking notes, talking through, or
otherwise preparing for what you will be writing. This is not a reading/research
stage, but a preliminary writing stage. You should start this stage before
you feel fully ready.
Informal Outlines
At the end of each pre-writing session, make a small outline of what
you’ve just written and where you want to go next. This will
be difficult, but if you make a practice of doing it for a minute
or two
at the end of each session, you will get better at it and reap the
eventual benefits. Avoid making the outline better and better. Be
satisfied with
its imperfect state.
Avoid the Urge to Research (at this stage)
You will be learning from the prewriting and early outlining what additional
specific research needs to be done. This will help you avoid over-researching.
Revise and Expand
In each succeeding pre-writing period, revise and expand your outline.
Note what your main points are, and add supporting material. Start to
use your notes from previous reading and research. If the notes are too
detailed, cull out the pertinent information by making notes on your
notes.
Write Informally
At this stage you should write as you would talk. Fight the urge to
be perfectionistic in your writing. Don’t try to cover all
the points at once. Simplify.
Why not try Boice’s techniques if you have been feeling blocked?
This article is a short introduction to a much longer series of techniques.
Although these suggestions may go against every fiber of your academic
soul, if your current writing techniques have gotten you mired down, "writing
before you are ready” may be worth a try. Look for more on these
techniques in subsequent issues of the Academic Ladder!
*I followed Boice’s advice in preparing this article, and it worked.
To see my "pre-writing,” click here!
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