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Prewriting Techniques

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What Is Prewriting. At any point in the writing process that you feel stuck or need to regroup is a good time to do some prewriting. There are many techniques that ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Prewriting Techniques


1
Prewriting Techniques
  • Coming up with Ideas

2
What Is Prewriting
  • At any point in the writing process that you feel
    stuck or need to regroup is a good time to do
    some prewriting. There are many techniques that
    prove useful play around with different
    activities to see which work best for you.

3
(1) Brainstorming and (2) Journalistic Questions
  • Brainstorming works well in a group situation as
    everyone throws out ideas. Writing a list of
    everything related to a topic can be helpful as
    an individual activity as well. More
    specifically, listing as many responses as you
    can to a particular question can be helpful.
  • Answering who, what, where, when, why, and how
    about your topic can also help you see where you
    may need to do more research or develop your
    research questions further.

4
(3) The Rhetorical Situation
  • Lloyd Bitzer developed the idea of the rhetorical
    situation that is, that arguments arise out of a
    need to address a particular event, not in a
    vacuum. The next slide lists the parts of the
    rhetorical situation. Can you address all of
    these parts in relation to your issue or claim?

5
The Rhetorical Situation
  • 1. Exigence. Exigence is usually a situation that
    is controversial and about which people have
    differing opinions. Often it is a problem to be
    solved.
  • 2. Author. In approaching an analysis of an
    argument, you need to consider the credibility,
    the reliability of the authors. Who are they?
    What is their background on the topic? As the
    author yourself, what is the nature of your
    relationship to the issue? How can you develop
    your credibility?

6
The Rhetorical Situation
  • 3. Text. What kind of texts are you using in your
    research and what are their features and
    limitations? Will these limitations affect your
    use of them? What are the conventions of the text
    you are producing?
  • 4 and 5. Constraints and Readers/Audience. These
    two elements are difficult to separate. Your
    audience will be made up of people who may have
    very different views from you and from each
    other. They may value different things that
    constrain (restrict) them to think and react to
    an argument in very specific ways. Who is your
    audience, what are the constraints with which
    you are working (their values and beliefs), and
    how will you address them both?

7
(4) Argument Approaches
  • Problem-solving, Definition, Cause or
    Consequence, Comparison are all different
    approaches to your claim or issue. Write a claim
    based on each one of these approaches. How would
    your argument progress if you were looking at the
    issue from these different approaches?

8
(5) Problem-Solving
  • To take the problem-solving even farther, answer
    as many questions about your issue as you can
  • What exactly is the problem?
  • Is it made up of several smaller problems?
  • Who is it a problem for? Who is it not a problem
    for?
  • What caused the problem?

9
Problem-Solving
  • Should this problem even be solved?
  • What will solving it do to the people involved?
  • What will solving or not solving it do to the
    main purpose or core business of the problem
    solver?
  • What happens if the problem isnt solved?

10
Problem-Solving
  • What have been some of the historical solutions
    to the problem? Why have they failed?
  • Did they fail because the solution was a poor one
    or because it was not implemented correctly?
  • Can any of the historical solutions be used
    because times have changed,
  • with some modifications that were not previously
    available?

11
Problem-Solving
  • What processes are at work in our problem?
  • What are the existing theories in this field or
    area of activity?
  • Which sciences are involved, and what do the
    experts tell us about how our problem works?
  • What are some predictable behaviors at work
    surrounding our problem, or possible solutions?

12
Problem-Solving
  • What is the problem like?
  • What are possible solutions like?
  • Can a metaphor be created?
  • Is an analogy better?

13
Problem-Solving
  • Finally,
  • Which is the best solution?
  • The simplest solution?
  • The one that best fits the goals?
  • The most ethical solution?
  • The cheapest?
  • How will you decide?
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