Tools and Settings
Content
Questions and Tasks
Writing is hard.
The problem is that we assume it’s easy. We think of writing as a remedial activity. We think of it the way we think about learning to ride a bike: Once we get the hang of it, we’ve got it covered forever. University students routinely try to “get out of” taking first-year writing in part because they think they’ve peaked as writers and there’s nothing more to learn.
Nothing could be further from the truth. Learning to write is an iterative process. You get better at it as you practice, practice, practice.
But there’s another problem: Not only is writing iterative; it’s complicated. Writing is a social activity mediated by technology and the needs of writers and readers. Technology, writers, and readers are all complicated dimensions of the rhetorical situation. As you learned in the last chapter, communication is embedded in social worlds of negotiated meaning. So, writing has to respond to this situated but uncertain world.
In a very real way we’re never done learning to write.
Another way we act as if writing is easy, to our detriment, is that we spend so little time on it. When get writing assignments, we put them off, procrastinating the day of our writing till the night before. Once we get words on the page and we’ve checked for errors, we hesitate to rethink them or revise them. So we don’t.
One last way we assume writing is easy: We don’t think about it at all. Writing expert Richard Lanham once said that
“Americans use their language, spoken as well as written, in a chronic absence of mind.”
You could think of a number of ways this statement might be interpreted: We don’t think, we don’t plan, we don’t strategize, we don’t scrutinize, we don’t reflect, we don’t take language seriously. We take it for granted.
In this chapter, I invite you to leave these false assumptions behind, break from whatever habits you may have had in the past, and develop a mindful disposition to writing.
The term "mindfulness" is trendy. The word might make you think of someone sitting criss-crossed on a yoga mat with a look of vague stillness on their face. Scholars who study Buddhism, like the Vietnamese monk Thich Nhat Hanh or professor of medicine Jon Kabat-Zinn, think of mindfulness as a kind of still presence—a way to be fully present in your body, detecting sensation and feeling in order to calm and redirect the mind. This kind of mindfulness is essential for mental health.
But there is another way to think of mindfulness. Mindfulness, for me, is the art of being aware of the activity you are participating in and how you might do it better. This is usually how scholars define metacognition: the process of monitoring and controlling our activity to maximize our efforts. I am suggesting here that mindfulness, as I've defined it, helps us improve our writing tasks because it directs us to monitor and control the process from beginning to end.
When you become a mindful writer, you take control of your own process in order to improve it, refine it. You become a philosopher of your own learning.
That sounds mighty grand for a general education class you might have been hesitant to take. However, mindful writing isn’t just an esoteric, abstract academic exercise. Heaven knows you don’t need any more of those, especially as you approach the last year or two of your undergraduate studies. If you can make metacognition central to your process as a writer, you will find that writing, though hard, can be managed—and improved. You’ll feel more confident as you start to put words on the page. When you’re finished, you’ll feel like you learned more about writing and yourself as a writer. You’ll feel more prepared for the next writing task you take on.
Writing is not just a product but a process. Writers go through a process when they write. They think, they make notes in their heads and on scratch paper, they put words on the page/screen, they review those words and make changes. They ask questions and go out looking for answers. If they’re wise, they give their writing to someone else to review so they can see if they’re accomplishing what they set out to do. And then they make more changes.
Processes are also (a) idiosyncratic, and (b) socially contingent. By idiosyncratic, I mean that each person has a writing process that may or may not follow a logical step-by-step pattern. For example, the last time I taught first-year writing, I encouraged students in the early stages of writing to “let the madman/madwoman out” by writing quickly and sloppily, without worrying about where the writing would go or whether it would be any good. This “mad writer” method worked well for some students. For others, letting the madman out made no sense if the madman was just going to run amok with no clear aim.
By socially contingent, I mean that our writing processes fit the rhetorical situation in which we find ourselves (see Chapter 2). If I’m tapping out a light-hearted text message to my sister Amanda, I’m not going to think too hard about the quality of what I’m typing. Sometimes one thoughtless draft gets the job done. But if you’re planning to publish social science research for other social scientists who have high standards for research methods, data evidence, and writing quality, then you’re going to use a thorough writing process, starting with research questions and ending with meticulous proofreading. The social situation in which we write influences our processes.
For the rest of this chapter, I will describe a process I’m calling the mindful writing cycle. This cycle isn’t just something I cooked up this morning and slapped up in a chart. This cycle is based on significant research into the way people write and the way people improve as writers. (Yes, there are people out there who study the activity of writing as a subject worthy of study in itself. They’re wild at parties.) The cycle is in part based on the model of self-directed learners developed by Susan Ambrose in How Learning Works.
Remember from the previous section that I’m using the word mindful to refer to the way we monitor and control our writing process in order to improve our chances for social success through writing, no matter what writing situation we find ourselves in. If we use a mindful writing cycle, we’ll learn from our writing experience.
Though I present this cycle in stages, I encourage you to use these activities in whatever way you see fit as you become the kind of writer you need to be. Your instructor may ask you—nay, assign you—to follow this cycle in specific ways. The goal is to help you become a more mindful writer.
Here’s a quick tour of the cycle before we get into specifics:
Plan: A mindful writer will take time at the beginning of a writing task to assess the task and set goals. In the planning stage, you’ll consider what your audience wants from you as a writer. You’ll collect and study examples of the thing you’re supposed to write. You will decide when you’ll write and how you’ll discipline yourself write.
Practice: In the practice stage, you come up with ideas, write out a draft using various rhetorical strategies appropriate for your context, and ask for feedback from people whose judgment you trust. I know we often call this stage “drafting,” and, sure, it’s that. But the word practice reminds us that you are iterating—you are beta-testing your ideas before you have to send them out into the world.
Revise: Revision happens throughout any writing process; you can’t help but make little changes as you go. In the cycle of mindful writers, you receive feedback and then you make deliberate, meaningful changes to your work at all levels (from the whole argument to the puntuation) to prepare to hand it over to a teacher, editor, or some other audience.
Reflect: To develop your metacognitive abilities as a writer, you’ll need to think carefully about what you’ve learned from the writing process, what you’ll take with you to future writing tasks, and what needs to change. Without this step, you can’t take control of your writing.
OK, now that we’ve set up the global picture of writing processes, I’m going to go straight for the advice. In the next four sections, you'll find suggestions for each step in the cycle of mindful writers. This content can feel a bit list-y, but I've designed it that way to serve as a reference to help you build your metacognitive abiltities at each stage of the writing process. Dive in and out of this material as necessary.
Remember that in the planning stage, we (a) assess the task and (b) set goals.
Any time you set out to solve a problem or complete a task, you want to step back and look at what needs to be done and make some plans.
One time my wife asked me to build a shelter in our backyard for our bikes. I'd never built one. So I watched a few videos on YouTube, talked to some neighbors, and went around my block taking pictures of other people's shelters to catch the vision. My planning made the task easier when I finally bought lumber and started hammering it together. As a mindful writer, you should take time to plan out your project before sitting down to write.
Read the assignment carefully. If you’ve been given an assignment sheet, read it. Notice key terms for what you’re being asked to do (like analyze or argue). If your assignment came with due dates (introduction, first draft), put those dates in your phone. If your instructor gave you a rubric or other evaluative criteria, review it.
Recall what you already know about this kind of writing (prior knowledge). Ask yourself the following questions:
Analyze the genre. This is an important term that you learned from last chapter (yay, prior knowledge!). From the perspective of rhetoric, genres are more than just forms or categories of writing (e.g., romance novels). Genres are semi-formal but adaptive text types that respond to a variety of social needs. In the social sciences, we use a variety of genres to make knowledge: genres like literature reviews, research articles, grant proposals, oral presentations, or email queries. To analyze a genre, try these three steps:
Assess your own rhetorical situation.
Anticipate the value of the task.
Decide what you want your paper to look like. Now that you’ve reviewed some examples, both good and bad (I hope), describe the kind of paper you want to write:
“In my paper, I want to do X, Y, and Z because my audience . . .”
Such goals are called product goals, and they help you anticipate a successful paper.
Set goals about when and where you’ll write. Get out your phone, and plan some writing times. Block out time each day to write or even just think about your project. Even if it’s for only fifteen minutes. Write every day. Write every day so that when you get stuck, you won’t need to worry as much about a looming due date. Choose your writing spot carefully. Find a quiet, comfy place with few distractions.
Commit to distraction-free writing. I know we’re crazy about our phones and we can’t live without them. FOMO is real. So are the bad consequences of CPA—continuous partial attention. Commit fully to the writer’s life and shut off your phone, close all windows not related to your work, and disable all notifications. Get into deep focus mode, and the writing will be easier.
Reward yourself. If you’ve had a good writing day, go get yourself something sweet or savory. Or go watch an episode of that show you’ve been bingeing.
Set goals to share your work with others. Set a goal to share your work with a class member, a writing tutor (in the Writing Center), or a trusted friend or family member. Talk, annoyingly, about your project with anyone who will listen.
Self-exploration. If you have flexibility on the topic, ask yourself (and answer in writing),
Inquiry. Ask questions. If you have a vague sense of a topic, jump on Google and read anything you can find. Consult Wikipedia. Go to the library and find a book and read it (or at least “around” in it). Find key terms or authorities from an informal search. Talk to experts about your topic. Use Google Scholar or academic databases to review expert research in social science. Review data from published experiments, surveys, or interviews; maybe you can do your own surveys or interviews.
Form a hypothesis about your topic, like “I think X influences Y, but I’m not sure” or “I think X is the case, but I’m not sure” or “I think X would be a solution to Y, but I’m not sure.” It’s so important to begin a writing task with questions and not answers; don’t do research merely to support your preconceptions. (In future chapters, you’ll learn more about the research process.)
Unstructured drafting. Some invention activities invite you to write without thinking much about where you’re going. Unstructured invention activities can help you put ideas into sentences to explore what you’re thinking. Make lists, draw pictures, make clusters (by writing your topic in the middle of a page and then branching out from there with subtopics/issues). Try freewriting: Just start writing about your topic without stopping, even if you feel like your ideas are bad. Don’t stop until your fingers fall off.
Structured drafting. For those of you less inclined to the free association of unstructured drafting, you can try the structured kind. Use the journalist’s questions: who, what, when, where, why, and how. Think about your topic in categories: history, consequence, law, authority, value, location, cost, etc.
Outlining. I know this sounds high school-y, but research shows that it’s effective for early drafting. Additional research suggests, though, that outlining works best if you’ve brainstormed ideas first. So, then, here’s an order for outlining:
Write an outline for your project, even if you’re not sure you’ll keep it. Anticipate how long each section will be, even if you’re not sure. Write the number 1 and then write a key term or phrase about what you’ll do first, and so on. Use subordination—that’s when you tab over for subtopics, like this:
Outlining is a helpful way to find what will become the subheads of your paper. If you’re far enough in your inquiry process to know what you want to talk about, you can outline nearly every paragraph of your paper before you write it. I’ve found it useful to outline a text and then write underneath the subcategories the names of sources I’ve found that will fit in that subcategory.
Genre drafting. From my YouTube research on wedding toasts, I notice that many of them begin with a joke—sometimes a wicked-cruel but still funny joke—and then move to nostalgia about friendship, and maybe a little praise at the end. Similarly, you can draft your paper by keeping your target genre in mind as you write, which is a particularly useful exercise when you’re working on a big research project.
Genres are blueprints for social behavior. If you’re writing a research project that begins with an introduction laying out previous reserach, then start there. Often in social science writing, there is a “methods” section and/or a “results” section. Use these sections as guides for your drafting (but make sure the genre you’re writing fits your instructor’s assignment!).
Audience drafting. Related to genre drafting, audience drafting means only this: Think about your audience as you write. Remember their concerns, what they know and don’t know, what they need from you to understand what you’re trying to say. If your audience is non-specialist—if, for example, you’re writing about social science research to the public—translate your specialist knowledge into clear, accessible language. Define your terms. Make reader-friendly moves by providing clear transitions. Help them understand why your work is important.
Ignore sentence-level issues. It’s hard to ignore errors and clumsy sentences as we draft, but I’d urge you to write as swiftly as you can at first and ignore sentence-level issues. There’s no use polishing up a draft that you plan to revise after receiving feedback. Turn off the grumpy editor who wants to tell you you don’t know enough, your writing isn’t working, you have to make things perfect. Everyone is entitled to a lousy first draft. (But no professional writer is content with a first draft!)
Write every day. I know I’ve already said it in the section on planning, but let me say it again. If you write every day, even if it’s for just fifteen minutes, you’ll have more material, more ideas, more text to work with.
Your peer reviewers play the role of readers for your work. Review helps us become reader-centered writers rather than narcissistic writer-centered ones. It gets us out of our own heads.
Write your peer reviewer a letter. As you prepare for peer review, write a “Dear Reader” letter. Doesn’t have to be long. At the top of your draft, write “Dear Reader,” and then explain what you’re trying to do and why you’re trying to do it. Describe your imagined audience and their needs. Assess the draft by describing what makes it strong and where you think it’s weak. Maybe give them specific tasks as readers: “I’m concerned that on page 4 I lose the thread of my argument,” or “I’d like you to look for places that could use more support” or “Please ignore the third section; I’m still working on getting it right” or “Please tell me where you feel most interested/bored with the paper.”
Many times getting a peer review involves giving one in return. As a peer reviewer, you’ll want to follow whatever protocol your instructor gives you. If you don’t receive specific instructions for peer review, consider doing some of the following:
Be positive. Give the writer praise for the things you think he/she did well, and give him/her specific praise (with page numbers) describing the strengths you see in the paper.
Use shared criteria. If your instructor gave you a rubric, use its language to describe what you see in the paper. Use key terms (like argument, organization, evidence).
Be specific. Avoid vague “good job” or “it could be improved” kind of talk. Be specific about the paper’s strengths and weaknesses.
Stay focused on the macro. It’s easy as a reviewer to get caught up in micro (sentence-level) issues, like mistakes. Ignore them, assuming that the writer will proofread before publishing. Focus on the rhetorical situation: the genre, audience, and purpose. Is the purpose clear? Is the genre appropriate for the situation? What is the overall feel of the paper?
Ask questions. Sometimes the best feedback is a good question written in the margin: “Why is this here?” or “Where is the evidence of what you’ve just said?”
Respond as a reader. Trust your instincts. You can tell things about the paper based on your own experience reading it. Where did you disengage, get lost or confused, raise an eyebrow in skepticism? Are you convinced by the argument? Did the writer do something powerful with language? Tell them.
Novice writers struggle with these avoidance feelings once they have a draft written. Research shows that novice writers revise very little of their drafts, making mostly cosmetic changes while proofreading. The more successful writers are thinking about their genre, audience, and purpose in the revision process. Moving commas around will come later. Revision is the process of re-seeing your work in an effort to make it as strong and effective as possible. And yes, it can be painful as heck. Surely it will be less painful if you’ve given yourself time to revise and if you’re writing every day. (Got the message yet? Write every day! Think of yourself as a writer. It's what you do.)
Revision is a mindset. When you give your writing to someone else, you make yourself vulnerable, like that moment when the doctor comes in and you’re wearing that little sheet that’s open in the back, feeling like a weirdo and waiting for the next embarrassing thing to happen. If you decide to take on a mindful learner disposition as a writer, you’ll tell yourself the profound but often unspoken truth that All writers have more to learn. Even you.
In that sense, you won’t feel like your writing is an embarrassment but a moment to explore your own thinking while you’re saying something important. When you receive feedback, listen attentively. Don’t try to defend what you’ve written; everyone knows it’s a draft and you’re entitled to write poorly in a draft. Ask good questions and take notes. Let the peer review process instruct and refine you.
With feedback in hand, you’re ready to re-see your work. The mindful writer now monitors and controls the process with “user” (i.e., audience) perspective. As you review the feedback and your draft, start devising a revision plan. Your revision plan will be composed of your own sense of the draft and the feedback you received.
Because writing processes are idiosyncratic, you’ll find your own path through revision. Here are some questions you might want to ask yourself as you revise:
Once again, stay focused at first on getting the Big Picture in place before you start revising sentences for style or error. Learn to trust your instincts. Sometimes as we read our work carefully, if we read it carefully, we have these impressions, a “felt sense,” of how the writing is going. Listen to what your senses are telling you. Imagine a fellow social scientist (or whoever your audience is) reading your text. Read your text out loud to get some distance between you and it, to hear it in a new way.
You want your revisions to be purposeful. You want to be able to explain to someone how your revisions improve your text. That’s the goal: deliberate, purposeful changes to a text to make it more rhetorically powerful.
I’ve been trying to convince you in this chapter that writing is more than just doing a task. Mindful writing means developing new powers, dispositions, and habits—a new, more aware and deliberate writing Self, committed to improvement. When we write, we project an identity to our audiences; by reflecting, we construct a learning identity for ourselves.
Research has demonstrated that reflective writing can help people overcome post-traumatic stress disorder, tragedy, anxiety, depression, racial prejudice, academic failures, and other ailments. In a more modest way, reflective writing can help us think through what we've accomplished when we finish tasks and how we're a different, wiser person as a result of it.
After you turn in a final draft, you can build a healthy, mindful writerly identity by spending a little time reflecting on what you've learned in the process. Ideally, your instructor will require you to do some of this reflection—either in an informal writing assignment or in class discussion—so you can make this identity construction a social experience.
I know it sounds corny, but reflection can make you a better person. When you look back at something you’ve accomplished with something more deliberate and mindful than relief, you develop dispositions for writing success in the future.
So: How should you reflect? You can start by answering the following questions:
Notice how these questions invite you to think about your completed task in a variety of ways related to the course, your assessment of the final product, your perception of your own growth, and your sense of what needs to change in the future.
And now I hope you’re seeing how the steps in the cycle for mindful writers are connected. There’s always another writing task on the horizon. These questions prepare you to move forward by looking backward. When you start a new task, you start with the dispositions, experiences, and knowledge you already have; there’s no shortcut to becoming the writer you want to become. But after each task, you can consolidate your new powers to project yourself into the next writing task, having become just a little bit better than you were before.
In my experience, students underestimate the amount of time they will spend as professionals—no matter the profession—working on writing tasks with others. In a 2015 study on writing in the workplace, University of Wisconsin literacy expert Deborah Brandt discovered that most workplace writing is co-authored, as is most published social science scholarship. Does that surprise you? Considering some of your previous experiences with collaborative writing, it might do more than surprise you—it might dismay you.
I don't want to start on a negative note here, but let's acknowledge that not everyone has a good experience working on projects with others.
Sometimes we just don't get along. A common group anguish is with the freeloader, the group member who shows up to maybe one meeting, disappears, won't respond to emails or texts, maybe shows up on the day of the group presentation to stumble through, and then takes credit for the final project. We all know this person. This person is on the Naughty List. Don't be that person.
Don't be the controller, either. That's the person who, from the beginning, and perhaps because this person is anxious the rest of you won't pull your load, takes over the whole project and starts calling the shots. There's also the pleaser, who just wants to do what everyone else wants to do and has no original ideas or suppresses his or her own valuable alternative ideas.
Much like what Leo Tolstoy says about families in the first line of the novel Anna Karenina, there are many ways unhappy groups are unhappy. Who can blame students for wanting to avoid them?
In spite of the somewhat popular but vague negative feeling about group projects, my guess is that many of you have had positive experiences working in groups. And it turns out that all the research on collaborative learning has revealed that students learn significantly from group projects. The Association of American Colleges and Universities labels collaborative work a "high-impact practice" because of what students get from it. When you have to work together, especially with folks you wouldn't normally associate with, you have to listen to others, learn from them, and test your ideas against theirs, which can be a refining process. You'll find out that—imagine!—not everyone thinks the way you do, and we're better off when we combine our ideas with the ideas of others.
What do you do if you've been assigned a group writing project? How do you ensure that the end product is something you can be proud of and that the process you take to get there is productive?
Get to know each other. If your instructor has assigned you a group and you don't know the other members well, take some time to get to know one another. Cover the standard ground about where you're from, what you're into, and what you want to do later in life.
Set up an easy communication system. Swap contact information. Group text messages work best for most people. Talk about how you're going to use a synchronous online system for collaboration. Google Docs works so much better than trying to pass Word documents back and forth because you can edit documents simultaneously and the changes are automatically saved. Review your schedules with each other so you'll know when you might be able to meet.
Discuss past group work. Share with each other an experience or two about both successful and unsuccessful collaborative projects you've been in before. Talk specifically about what made a project work, or not. Share your concerns, if you have any, about group work. Talk about what you hope to get out of this project.
Draft a Group Contract. If your group is up for it, you might want to draft a "Group Contract" that each person agrees to, with statements like, "I will come to all our group meetings and stay on task," "I will be timely in my communication with members of my group," "If I miss a meeting or class period, I will contact all my group members and make up for what I've missed," and so on.
Assess the task and set goals. Review together the assignment you've been given. Review whatever assignment sheets, due dates, or rubrics you've received. Break down the task into parts: What needs to happen first, second, third? Decide on a timeline for when you want to have pieces of the project completed.
Assign group roles. The most productive groups I've been in have a very clear distribution of labor. Each of us knows what our assignment is. Everyone has a task. The easiest way to divide up a group writing task is to assign each segment of the genre you're writing (introduction, literature review, etc.). However, that method might lead to a fragmented text. Instead, you may want to consider assigning roles related to project management: timekeeper, notetaker, editor, communication director, reviewer, facilitator, etc.
Stay in touch. I know that some of you would rather start on a task and be left alone for a while, but in my experience, the stronger groups overshare with each other. I mean that they talk frequently, even if only for a few moments on a group text about this or that issue. It's easier to solve problems early when the entire group is open to this kind of self-correcting chatter. It would be even better if you could meet together face to face with open laptops and work together at the same time, talking and then writing and then talking and then writing.
Compromise. I've had more than one experience writing in groups when another group member has cut some of my material from the final product. Though I've never felt that the cut material was absolutely essential to the project, I have felt that my work was undervalued or dismissed or misunderstood. In those instances, I've had to move forward with the new changes knowing that each member will have to compromise material for the good of the project. If you feel like part of what you've produced is essential to the project, discuss the issue with all your group members.
Resolve differences. Sometimes groups don't get along. If so, don't assume your group is dysfunctional. It's a people thing to have static in close quarters. Some of these problems will be alleviated significantly with the kind of work I recommended in the last section. Before you go to the teacher, try to work out the differences together—all of you together (i.e., try to keep from pairing off in disagreement). Listen carefully to someone else's concerns. If things get unmanageable, visit with your instructor.
Write. Just throwing in my mantra again: Write, and write as much as possible. As a group member, don't wait till right before due dates to get things done. Get your work finished so you can then turn your attention to the work of others in the group. Invite other group members to read your work and offer feedback.
All-in on finishing touches. Though you may select someone to be the final editor or proofreader, plan for each group member to review the final product before turning it in. You want every member to sign off on the final project so the responsibility is shared.
Reflect. Once you've turned in your project, take a moment and think about what you've learned—about writing, about yourself as a writer, about group projects, about the topic you wrote about. What went well? If you could go back to the beginning, what would you change about the way your group handled the project? What did you learn from the group project that you likely would not have learned working on your own? What will you do differently when you need to work in a group again?
Assess. With any luck, your instructor will ask each group member to fill out a peer evaluation form to describe and assess the various efforts of the other group members. If you're not sure your instructor has set up a system like this, go ask. On the better peer evaluation forms I've seen, the instructor asks you to rate both the quantity and quality of each group member. Final scores might depend on the way you evaluate your peers. It's hard sometimes to make such judgments on people you've worked closely with. But without this accountability, some people will do more work than others.
In conclusion, I hope you can have more positive experiences working on collaborative writing tasks. Team projects and collaborative writing are central to the work of many situations you'll find yourself in at college and in your career. If you can learn to work effectively with groups, you'll have great success, no matter what you do.
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And if you take only one thing away from this entire chapter, I hope I've at least convinced you to become a mindful writer who thinks not only about what you write but how you write—so that the next time you face a writing task, you're even more competent and confident than before.