Tools for Writing

Advice to my Graduate School Self

Someone recently asked me what advice I would give to my younger writing self and I immediately thought of the challenges and discomfort I experienced while writing my dissertation. I did indeed come up with advice for Her, and I thought maybe I should share that here as well - kind of like all of you are my younger selves…

Of course my first reaction was:
Don't go to graduate school??? Or at least don't work with the woman I did.

If I Can’t Make It Accessible, I’m Not Doing It

This is one of my core beliefs — more than a belief, actually — it’s kind of wired into the way I am. If something isn’t accessible or I can’t find a way to make it accessible, I just lose interest.

But while accessible writing is a Good Thing, it can be hard to be simple (that’s what editing is for). Let me tell you a little story…

Procrastination OR Life in 15-minute Segments

Don’t you hate it when people start articles on procrastination by telling you what it is?

As if we don’t know exactly what it is, how it gets in our way, and the challenges of getting past it.

Harumph.

Well, I’m not going to do that to you.

What I am going to do is share some recent research about what makes it easier to procrastinate and, therefore and thusly, what might help to move through it.

Your Dissertation Literature Review: What's Your Story?

We’ve been having some discussions recently in our UnDissertation Group calls and online Discussion group about how to write a literature review that includes what’s needed, leaves out what’s not needed, and doesn’t leave you or your reader all wrapped in unnecessary detail.

One of the issues we’ve been exploring is Story.

Even a non-fiction, serious research review is a Story (or needs to be).

After all, what you’re doing is guiding your readers to where you need them to be to understand:
  • why your research questions and answers are important; and
  • why you’ve designed your study in the way you have.

To get them there, you need to construct a “story line”, that includes such elements as:

How Microwaves Overcome Writer's Block

This is from a marketing newsletter I receive from Sean at Psychotactics.

It may seem odd to be sharing a marketer’s advice with you, but there are certain similarities in the struggle to get words-that-matter down on the page.

And this article, in particular, spoke to me because so many of those participating in our UnDissertation Discussion Group seem to write quickly and eloquently and well —in their posts. They feel stuck when they sit down to Write Their Dissertation.

So let me share Sean’s advice…

12 Steps to becoming a more prolific scholar

These notes are from a writing workshop by Tara Gray called “Publish and Flourish: Become a Prolific Scholar,” presented at the 2006 Text and Academic Authors convention.

What I’ve done  is to extract the key points and snippets of some of them, but you’ll want to go the TAA website for the full article, for sure. Great content. Here goes…

The myth persists that prolific scholars are born, not made, but research suggests otherwise. Much is known about how to become more prolific — and any scholar can. These steps will show you how.

Are You Ready to Write? Are You Sure?: Writing Pre-Preparation

OK, it’s Writing Time. Get going… No…Wait! Wait?? Did I say wait??? Well, yes, I did. If you have difficulty sitting down to write, you may want to start even before the very beginning. Let’s look at what happens before you even pick up the pen or put your hands on the keyboard. What do you do? Research by Robert Boice on successful academic writers shows…