Friday, May 24, 2019
Pre Writing Skills
PRE WRITING TECHNIQUES Pre piece is the first stage of the writing process, typically followed by drafting, revision, editing and publishing. Elements of prewriting may embarrass planning, research, outlining, diagramming, storyboarding or clustering etc. Prewriting is key because it helps you generate ideas for writing. Some of the prewriting techniques are 1. Outlining 2. Free Writing 3. Thinking maps 4. Cubing 5. Directed Questioning 6. agate line making and n one and only(a) taking 7. Brain storming 8. Clustering 9. Charting 10. ScanningThe event of individually skill along with its examples is keepn below. 1. Outlining An outline is a document that briefly summarizes the information that will be included in a paper, book, speech, or similar document. It shows the order in which the information will be presented and indicates the relationship of the pieces of information to each other. By making an outline of the document which we begin to compose gives us inside of our d ocument. Examples 1. Suppose a cosmopolitan situation in which a person is given to pen an phrase on a general issuing, what should he do after opting his topic?Of course he will begin to collect data for his article, now while collecting data, as he read by means of books and articles, he will create an might card. From each source the gathered information will be put in an index card. That index card will be his outline of that article and that process which he has adopted is outlining. 2. Consider another situation in which you are needed to write an essay on your favorite personality (say Quaid-e-Azam). You will make an outline for the material you want to include in the essay. E. g. Birth, early education, higher education, spare-time activitys, works, oddment etc. . Free Writing A strategy designed to free ideas from your subconscious take heed and gets them vote out on paper. This kind of writing is free in another sense you dont need to worry close punctuation, correct grammar usage, etc. Your main objective is to write for a sustained period of time (ten to 15 minutes) without stopping. In this you are free to make mistakes and write whatever you want. Examples 1. Suppose you are a student and your professor has just given you an assignment. You are required to write a paper about a specific topic, or to buzz off up with a topic of your own.You begin to panic. Where do I exit? you may ask yourself. How do I begin? There is just no need to be worried. Take your pen and start writing each and everything related to that topic. Once you have done this, now just organize the things and note them neatly. 2. Suppose you are an Electrical engineer and you work in an office and your BOSS has assigned you a task to estimate budget plan of constructing a building. Obviously it is not your job but order is order. As it is not your job, you dont need to be panic and you can write anything that comes in your mind about the assigned task. . Think ing Maps Thinking maps are regnant tools to help you gather ideas and arrange information as you prepare to write for any occasion and purpose. It shows you how the parts of a subject are related. Once a person understands the essentials, thinking maps can be like completing a puzzle which is interesting. Examples 1. 2. Condensation Precipitation Evaporation Water vapor, a gas returns to fluent state Liquid water falls as rain, sleet, hail, or snow Liquid water becomes water vapours, a gas 4. Cubing Cubing is the art of explaining any topic from diverse perspectives.Cubing is an excellent tool for rapidly exploring a topic. It reveals quickly what you know and what you dont know, and it may alert you to decide to narrow or expand your topic. These perspectives may include 1. Describing to others. 2. Comparing with others. 3. Associating with others. 4. Analyzing it. 5. Its applications and usage. 6. Argue for or against it. Examples 1. If you produce a cosmetic item, you share yo ur production with others, compare it with other cosmetic items, relate it to a severe quality item, analyze it either it is costly or not, tell its benefits and at last give arguments in its favor. . If you are a mobile phone dealer, you go to different shops and tell them you sell Nokia or Samsung phones, you compare your items with other mobiles, relate your links that you are trustworthy dealer, you discuss its financial aspects and try to convince shop custodian to buy mobiles from you. Cubing helps you to write all this procedure in a good way. 5. Directed Questioning This technique works when you have a topic of your interest but you are not sure what and how to write it. It this kind of situation, you dont need to expand your thoughts, rather you have to limit your ideas to the point.Also when you question yourself about the topic you are going to write, this mechanism of questioning makes it easier to write about the topic. Examples 1. If you are asked to write about educ ational services of Sir Sayad Ahmad Khan, you can discuss diachronic background of Sir Sayad but your focus should be educational services, and not the other aspects because it is not necessary to include all the things. 2. If you are given any travail, you select it and then questions can make it easy to write about ite. g. why you are interesting in this project?How you got this idea? What are merits of it? What are demerits of it (if any)? Is this project financially supportive? etc. 6. Note making and Note taking The storing capacities of human memory are limited. It is useful, therefore, to know how to efficiently make notes of what one wants to remember. Note taking is a technique which is used when a person is reading or hearing something for the first time and he is trying to jot down the key information so he can use it later. Note making is when you return to those notes and make notes on them.This means you just go through notes, put things into your own words or summar ize them and highlight key points. This technique is useful while gathering information for a respective article from books and lectures etc. Examples 1. This technique is helpful when you are going to study a language other than you mother tongue. Because it is not easy to remember a covey of knowledge and vocabulary of the countenanceary language in one attempt. So there will be a need to read it again to hit the books and remember more about new language. 2. If you are attending a technical lecture (e. g. elated to some machine or something else), it is a good practice to make lecture notes because you might need them to make comprehensive understanding of the topic. 7. Brainstorming It means thinking of as many ideas as doable in a short amount of time. Brainstorming involves capturing all of the thoughts, ideas, and fragments in your head and writing them down on paper. Brainstorming is an informal way of generating topics to write about, or points to make about your topic. The important point about brainstorming is that there should be no pressure to be excellent. You should simply adequate to(p) their minds to whatever comes into them.Think of it as a kind of free association. When someone say literacy what pops into our mind? Most of us will come up with more unavailing ideas, but thats okay. Examples 1. If a person has a lot of money, he thinks what he can do with it. He can visit other countries, can give donations to charity, he can buy books and also he can give scholarships with this money. This is brainstorming because all these ideas come in a persons mind n a short time duration. 2. If you are asked to write some memorable experiences of your life, your mind just click and many such moments will come in your mind.This is also brainstorming. 8. Clustering Clustering is a non-linear brainstorming technique whose results yield a visual representation of subject and organization. Clustering is a procreative tool that helps us to connect thoug hts, feelings, and ideas not connected before. It allows us to loosely structure ideas as they occur in a shape that allows for the further extension of ideas. It taps our associative powers in a self-organizing process, encouraging us to create personally meaningful patterns. Examples 1. What else caused the War? Was slavery really the main issue? well-bred War Main Events Outcomes Causes People of Interest Slavery Pres Emancipation Poverty Gettysburg ? Atlanta Mobile phone 2. Phone calls, messaging Cost and comparison Media faker specifications 9. Charting Sometimes you will want to organize your ideas in the form of a chart. This technique works very well for comparison or contrast writing or examining advantages and disadvantages ( that is also a comparison). You can make many kind of charts depending on your topic and also the king of writing you are doing. Examples 1. 2. City colonisationAdvantages More Job, health, education and transport facilities Less job, health, ed ucation and transport facilities Disadvantages Noise, air, water pollution Calm atmosphere, pure vegetables, no noise 10. Scanning Scanning involves a process of quickly searching reading materials in order to locate specific bits of information. When scanning you dont start from the beginning and read to the end. Instead, what you do is jump some in the text, trying to find the information you need. Scanning can help you locate specific pieces of information and gain an overview of the main points in an article or text.Examples 1. Suppose you are searching the meaning of a word in dictionary. Easy way to do this is that you first look the first alphabet, then second and so on until you reach the desired word. It is easier than starting from the first word of the dictionary to look the meaning. 2. While looking a number in a telephone book, you simply jump to the starting word of the name or other information known to you. This saves time. In this way Scanning involves moving ones eyes quickly down the page seeking specific words and phrases.
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