Professor, English
Q: What advice do you have for students about the process of writing an academic paper?Ā
A: What I find myself recommending again and again, whatever genre of academic writing people are working with, is a basic strategy I draw from journalismāto āfind your angleā: find a way of approaching a topic/project that interests you, that you can call your own, and that readers will likely find intriguing. And as a corollaryāto the extent that you can within the parameters of what youāre given to do, find what genuinely interests you. This may not be what your readings emphasize, nor what the instructor accents, nor even what you initially expected would interest you. When the doodles in the margins of your notes suggest a line of interest other than what youād planned on, follow that lead: it may bring you to a more stimulating approach. Then, āsleep on itā; leave time to let the back of your mind deepen the work. Iāve always found that the best ideas about how to go further with what Iām doing, as well as moments of greatest lucidity about what I am doing, often emerge when Iām not vigilantly at my desk, but rather when Iām almost asleep, buying groceries, mending a button or taking a walk.
Photo credit: Blair Folts
Recommended reference:
Peter Elbow, Writing with Power: Techniques for Mastering the Writing Process (New York: Oxford University Press, 1981)ānow available in electronic edition through ŗ«¹śĀćĪč Libraries