Drafting Your Paper--Part 1
Table of Contents:
- Standards for Writing:
     Basics
- Learning from the
      Experts
- Requirements for
     Essays
- Structure
- Voice
- Assigned Readings
- Research
- Arguing a Thesis
- Getting Started:
     Organizing Ideas
- Understand the
      Assignment
- Brainstorm
o Graphic Organizers        
- Research
o Credible and Reliable Sources
- Outline
o Brief Ideas—limit full sentences
In our course, we will be working with a minimum standard of a
basic 5-paragraph-essay, yet in 3rd person voice, with provable
content in every body paragraph, and proving logically the thesis statement
contained in the introduction paragraph (as the last sentence of the
introduction paragraph).  These basics
will become very familiar to you as the course moves on and as you use this
handout over and over.  If you have any
specific questions, I welcome them in the Discussion
Board forum in the Ask the Instructor thread.
Standards for Writing: Basics
As
the class starts, you could be wondering, “What is she going to expect me to
write?”  Well, the beginning of this
document contains basics to help you get a general feel for the writing that
will be acceptable in our class, and the rest of this handout will explain more
elaborately the details associated with writing in a persuasive, academic-style
while arguing a point. 
| 
Learning from the Experts 
I
  remember my years in college where I mistakenly believed that my professors had
  to allow me open-creativity while completing my assignments.  After all, I was an adult, now.  I was led to believe that after high school,
  I would get to begin making my own choices in life: whether positive or
  negative.  However, this did not happen
  in my college classes, nor did it occur in the ‘jobs’ that I worked to help
  pay for my studies.  Each professor—no matter
  the discipline of the course—had a specific requirement that I had
  to follow.  Whether it was the precise
  set-up of my Chemistry lab reports, the required step-by-step showing of
  my equation solutions in Calculus, or the seemingly restrictive structure
  of my essays in Studies in Medieval Literature, I was certain that I knew how
  to organize, sort, and present my information better than they did. 
Looking
  back, I now know that they were correct. 
  Each professor—whether I liked or personally related to him or her—had
  insights that I did not.  Each
  professor had experience in his/her field-of-study and knew best how to most productively
  succeed in it.  It only took me my
  first year of college-level studies to realize that the structure and
  organization touted by each of these professors in their given fields was the
  most logical and useful way of proceeding. 
  While I did not always agree with their personal views, one thing I
  could not dispute was that they all knew how to be methodical in their
  fields. 
I
  retell this so that you can hopefully learn more quickly than I did to
  respect the experience of professors. 
  While you may not always like their approach, beliefs, or views of the
  world, their experience in their fields are valuable.  Once you have learned from them—throughout your
  years of study—you have the option of stepping out of that ‘box’ of
  organized, prescribed structure and venturing out on your own.  However, while within the confines of the
  academic society, you will want to follow the pattern of presentation pre-set
  by your field.  In our case, this is
  writing.  There are basic standards for
  writing in English.  While your content
  may be subjectively reflected upon at times, the structure of your
  writing is objectively scored based on whether you have followed the
  pre-set conventions that best work to order ideas in a predictable and
  informative way.  Please review the
  organizational structure below and know that there is a method to my
  (writing) madness.  There is a reason
  that I want you to follow a specific order in your writing.  It is not so that I can have control over
  you.  I want you to follow this order
  so that YOU can have CONTROL over your presentation of material and CONTROL
  over the way you lead your reader through your argument.  I believe you will find ease and comfort in
  this structure once you use it effectively. 
  Try to respect the experience of those whom you have gone to for
  education and guidance. | 
Requirements for Essays
·        
Structure
·        
Voice
·        
Assigned Readings
·        
Research
·        
Arguing a Thesis
- STRUCTURE:
     At a minimum you will be writing a 5-paragraph-essay.
- PARAGRAPH MINIMUMS FOR
      ESSAYS
                                         
i.    This does not mean that
it cannot be longer, with more body paragraphs; however, the minimum you will
write for the essays in our class will be constructed
in a 3-part-system: Introduction, Body, and Conclusion.
·        
Introduction paragraph: with the thesis statement as the LAST
sentence of that introduction paragraph. 
You will learn more about introduction paragraphs below. It
must be at least 3 sentences in length, but more are typical.
·        
Body paragraphs: at least three that follow the hamburger
method detailed in this handout, and more specifically in the Hamburger Method
handout posted to the classroom.  Body
paragraphs will be at least 5 sentences in length. You will learn more
about body paragraphs below.
·        
Conclusion paragraph: will be one paragraph which will tidy
up the essay, pointing to the thesis, and at least 3 sentences in length. You
will learn more about conclusion paragraphs below.
- VOICE:
     You will only write in 3rd
     person voice—unless your instructor specifically gives you the
     go-ahead for a Narrative writing in 1st and 3rd
     person voice.
- ACADEMIC WRITING
      (ESSAYS)
                                         
i.    You will never use 2nd
person voice in the academic writings
for our course. 
·        
Eliminate
1st and 2nd person voice from your essays: you will not use I, we, you, us,
etc.  
·        
Learn
to craft your essays using 3rd person voice: you will use: he, she,
it, they, etc.
                                        
ii.    The best way to check to see if you are writing
in the correct voice for your academic paper is to go into your writing, do a
‘FIND’ (see the top right of your program) and type in the BAD words that you
were not to use.  If they come up, you
will need to rewrite the sentence to get it out of the incorrect voice.
- DISCUSSION BOARD POSTS
      AND PARTICIPATION
                                         
i.    Discussion Board posts—while needing to maintain the
3-parts-system of writing with at least an introduction paragraph, one body
paragraph (but more are typical, even in a Discussion Post), and a conclusion
paragraph—will not be required to stay
in 3rd person voice since you will be reflecting on readings,
addressing your peers, and engaging in dialogue with the class, thus allowing
for 1st, 2nd, and 3rd person voice.
- OTHER DISCIPLINES
                                         
i.    While the structure of
your writing will remain the same throughout college, no matter what discipline
you are writing within, the ‘voice’ may vary depending on instructor preference
or discipline guidelines.
·        
When
writing in other disciplines at the college-level, be sure to ask your
instructor if 1st, 2nd, or 3rd person voice is
the acceptable approach in that assigned writing.  
- ASSIGNED READINGS AND
     QUALITY RESEARCH
- For
      this class, you are required to use the assigned documents and research
      that you locate on your own through the library.  
- Quality
      sources are to be used in the class, not Wikipedia or random blog sites
      with little credibility.  Be
      choosey about the sources you use.
- ARGUING A THESIS
- Finally,
      you will be arguing a point (or evaluating someone else’s argument) when
      you write.  
- Whether
      you are writing a Classification or a Persuasive Argument writing, you
      need to assert a point and then prove
      that point in the writing.  
- All
      writing needs to have a debatable thesis (point) and then adequately
      argue and prove that point.  
                                         
i.    You can use the OWL of
Purdue for help in crafting logical arguments at http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/659/1/
Getting Started: Organizing Ideas
- Understand the Assignment
- Brainstorm
- Graphic Organizers      
- Research
- Credible and Reliable Sources
- Outline
- Brief Ideas—limit full sentences
UNDERSTANDING THE ASSIGNMENT
- Even if you have
     an instructor who has decided to try out new assignments this semester,
     your instructor has tried to give you the necessary information to be able
     to complete your work properly.
- Instructors do
      not want you to fail.
- We went into
      education to help people gain knowledge, and holding you back from that
      knowledge is never our goal.
- The assignment
      directions that your instructor provided for you are essential to understanding
      what is expected of you to be able to demonstrate
      writing or content knowledge.
                                         
i.    Go to this YouTube
link to see the UNC Writing Center’s presentation on how to make certain
that you understand the
assignment given to you.
BRAINSTORM
- Brainstorming is often a step
     in the Writing Process that students quickly skip over.
- Brainstorming is
      essential because it:
                                         
i.    Digs deep into the topic
                                        
ii.    Begins the process of placing ideas on paper—so they become tangible
                                       
iii.    Opens the topic discussion so that you are working through your
assignment as you discuss your ideas with friends, family, and classmates
- There are various
      Graphic Organizers and Brainstorming Styles you can use to begin this
      step.  
- Look at our
      classroom blog and see if there is a Brainstorming idea you would like to
      use, or you could create your own.
- Watch this brief video
      on how to create a mind map: click here.
RESEARCH
- Research will often help
     you to become more comfortable with the topic assigned.  
- While research
      comes in many forms: books, news reports, magazines, Internet pages, the
      library, or simply discussing the topic with those close to you—and possibly
      experts in the field—you need to be very careful with who or what you
      believe.
- Credible Sources:
      Unbiased and Peer Reviewed sources by an Expert on the Topic
                                         
i.    Video
- Reliable Sources:
      Trusted source or publication appropriate to the time-period in
      discussion creates reliability
                                         
i.     video
- Even if you are
      not required to use research materials in your assignment, a few hours of
      quality reviewing of your topic at the campus library can greatly expand
      your view of the topic, help focus your ideas, and prepare you for all
      sides of the issue.
                                         
i.    While I find the word ‘crap’ low class and inappropriate in academic
writing, this term has become common to complete source review in
learning centers of American college by performing a C.R.A.P. test: SEE HERE for a C.R.A.P. test song, SEE HERE. 
                                        
ii.    NOTE: You do not have to review the C.R.A.P. test information above if you
consider the term they are referencing inappropriate.  However, as an appeal to the cultural youth
of today, the Learning Centers did a good job grabbing students with this
concept.
OUTLINE
- Outlines are
     required in academic writing to help you briefly organize your ideas in a
     way that will best follow the DRAFTING assigned to the essay with the use
     of the Hamburger Method.
- In the class
      blog, you will be able to see a few handouts that will assist you with
      your outline:
                                         
i.    Outline Suggestions
                                        
ii.    Outline Basics
- Keep the content in your outline as brief and organized as possible. You will not write full sentences—or worse, yet—full paragraphs in an outline. Save the full sentences and paragraphs for when you get to the DRAFTING stage. Don’t worry! It’s coming up next!
 Go to Drafting
Your Essay—Part 2 handout
for the next steps in
the Writing Process, focused on DRAFTING.
 


