Tag Archives: Narrative

Tackling Your First College Writing Assignment

Written by Anna Whitaker

Picture this: it’s three weeks into the semester and you’re facing down your first college-level writing assignment. Whether this is a research paper, a Think Piece, or a narrative essay, we’ve got some handy tips and tricks to get you started!

1. Get all the details.

Knowing everything you can about the assignment is going to make things a lot easier in the long run. Details and instructions can be found in several places; usually, they are on the assignment itself in Canvas, as well as the syllabus. Don’t be afraid to reach out to your professor, either. They want to see you succeed – they know everything about the assignment (they’re the ones who made it!) and are more than willing to share the nitty gritty details with you. Here are a few things you’re going to want to know about what you’re writing:

  • Format: Does your professor want MLA, APA, or something different?
  • Genre: Is this an argumentative research paper or a lab report? Are you writing an editorial piece or a lengthy literary analysis? Understanding the assignment genre will help guide your writing.
  • Technical Details: What’s the word requirement? How many sources are you supposed to have?

2. Figure out your topic, and outline it.

This is a key component in the writing process, because without it, you’ll have no idea where you’re going or even where to start! First, you’ll want to brainstorm your topic. What are you going to write about? What appeals to you? What topic has plenty of sources available for you to draw on?

Once you’ve decided, create an outline of what you want your paper to look like. It can be as bare as three or four bullet points, or you can go in-depth with topic sentences for each paragraph and jumpstart your research process by including links to sources. Outlining looks different for everybody – the goal is to have some guidance that can (and will) evolve as you develop your paper.

3. Jump into the writing!

You can start with your introduction, or dive straight into the body paragraphs. Writing doesn’t need to be linear, so go with whatever flow works for you. Remember, your first draft isn’t going to be perfect. The first draft exists so that you can get all your thoughts onto the paper – polishing and editing comes later in the process. As you write, keep the assignment guidelines in mind; your arguments, claims, and use of evidence should align with your thesis (a statement, usually in the introduction paragraph, that makes a claim about your topic and outlines how you’re going to back up that claim).

4. Bonus points: head over to the Write Site before you submit your paper to get advice and feedback from top-tier writers and English students.

The Write Site is a free service open to all Texas Woman’s University students (undergraduate and graduate) that assists with all aspects of writing. They help with big-picture issues (such as structure and argument development) to smaller scale items (like grammar and formatting). You can submit your first first or your final draft. The Write Site can work with whatever you’ve got in a face-to-face or online appointment! Whenever you get stuck, the Write Site and its well-trained writing consultants are a great resource to utilize to help get you past any writing block you’re facing.

College writing may seem daunting at first, but you’ve got plenty of resources behind you to help get you were you need to go. Best of luck!

Defeating Writer’s Anxiety with the Writing Game, “Elegy for a Dead World”

Written by Daehyun Won

Most writers, including myself, when writing something academic or creative, face writing anxiety during the process. Ironically, it’s when we need our creativity the most when that anxiety hits – when we pour over a sentence or passage for far too long. In those situations, our brains blank and become full of muddy sufferings. I remember a tough day last semester when I could only write five clumsy sentences. Those clumsy sentences took all of my energy that day.

Fortunately, we’re not alone in this problem. Famous, full-time writers struggle with writer’s anxiety. Van Wyck Brooks wrote in Opinions of Oliver Allston:

“No work this morning. My brain feels like an old sponge, battered by the waves and rocks of dozens of winters. In thirty years of writing, I have not gained an ounce of confidence. I begin each new book (as I have probably always begun, although I never remember it) with a sense of impotence, chaos and desperation that cannot be overstated. I always feel that I am foredoomed to failure.”

“Notebooks of the Mind: Explorations of Thinking” by Vera John-Steiner

Writer’s anxiety can come at any time to anyone.

The burden of creativity is the major factor that weighs on, pushes down, and blocks that creativity. Yes, the anxiety is all about creativity. Jeff Goins suggests various solutions to writer’s anxiety – to alleviate and ultimately defeat it; they include activities like walking, doing a puzzle, changing your environment, listening to music, calling someone, etc.

The most effective solution he suggests, however, is freewriting. This is meant to shifting the burden of creativity to the joy of creation. By freewriting, we can take the muddy sufferings as they come and put them on the page as part of the process.

Players write the story of “Elegy for a Dead World.”

For those who love video games like me, there is a perfect answer to writer’s anxiety: Elegy for a Dead World, the creative writing video game. This unique game is aimed to stir a writer’s inventive thinking. Throughout explorations of exotic, cosmic worlds, players write possible stories in given situations. What the player writes then becomes the game’s narrative – ultimately becoming the game’s creative ending.

The game’s interface is simple – not imposing or burdensome on the player. In certain places, spaceship-like writing pods with prompts appear in which the player fills in the blank with their imagination. The writing is not bound to a specific genre. Users can write down anything, such as a haiku, long-form poem, short fiction, etc. This creates the perfect setting for free writing as well as a great way to stimulate the player’s creativity.

Players write the story of “Elegy for a Dead World.”

You are a lone astronaut in a sci-fi world. This solitary situation provides an opportunity to contemplate and imagine your own plot. The player’s creativity is connected to various visual interactions with vivid surroundings. To assist visual learners’ in overcoming their writing block, these imaginative visual elements are helpful in disturbing a resting creativity. The most fascinating part of this game is its communal component. Players can share their stories with the game’s online community.

Writer’s anxiety might not be defeated flat out, but it can definitely be soothed so that creative writing is again fun and imaginative. It’s important to build confidence in your writing, so that you can defeat writer’s anxiety when you encounter it next.

For the game trailer:


References

“Elegy for a Dead World – A Game About Writing.” YouTube, uploaded by GameSpot Trailer, 30 Sep 2014, www.youtube.com/watch?v=QRXp-VfMOF0.

Elegy for a Dead World, Dejobaan Games, LLC, 2014.

“Elegy for a Dead World.” Steam, Valve, 2014, store.steampowered.com/app/252290/Elegy_for_a_Dead_World/.

Goins, Jeff. “How to Overcome Writer’s Block: 14 Tricks that Work.” Goins, Writer, GoinsWriter, n.d., goinswriter.com/how-to-overcome-writers-block/.

John-Steiner, Vera. Notebooks of the Mind: Explorations of Thinking. Oxford University Press, 1997.

Accommodating Cultural Diversity in Writing

Written by Sarah Cho

Born in South Korea and having lived my toddler years there, I learned to read and write in the Korean language first; English was not my primary language and I had to learn to write my ABCs almost simultaneously as I was mastering the basic Korean alphabet. Upon moving to the U.S., my parents spoke to me almost exclusively in Korean at home. I never thought it strange that I bounced between the two languages, home language and school language, but the cultural transition was not always easy.

In third grade, I was assigned a book report of making a shoe box diorama and writing up a paragraph that describes the scene depicted in the project. Mrs. Thompson, my homeroom teacher, had even created a rubric with instructions that requested parents help and participate in their child’s project. I was delighted to engage some artistic flair in my school assignment and I immediately requested my mother’s help with the glue gun because I knew her aesthetic skills would come in handy. We worked many hours into the night until I was satisfied with the final result. 

The next day, I set my diorama on the table where all of my classmates’ projects rested until it was each of the student’s turn to present it. After glancing at the other projects, my heart thudded rapidly in trepidation. I was completely mortified. I had not been mentally prepared to bring an incorrectly produced project to school.

When the dreaded moment finally came, I slowly walked up to the table and wrapped my shaking fingers around the personally designed shoebox. As I stood in front of my peers, I opened my lips to speak. No words came out. My eyes brimming with tears, I shamefully faced my classmates as they tilted their heads side-to-side confused. Their eyes shifted back and forth from my reddening face to my project that looked different from everybody else’s. After a few, excruciatingly long minutes of trying to explain the creation I had made, I broke down in tears. Mrs. Thompson swiftly intervened as she handed me the bathroom hall pass and suggested that I recollect myself with a little break. In those few moments in the bathroom, I cried my little heart out. I had been so proud of my creation, but why had mine looked so different?

I looked at my puffy-eyed reflection in the mirror and I despised being the only Asian girl in my grade. I was tired of explaining why my lunch was a salad that came in a styrofoam to-go box; I did not want to explain that my mother was an immigrant who worked full-time at a sandwich shop and neither had the time nor the cultural understanding of what American third-graders bring from home as packed lunch. My nine-year-old self merely longed to have the same PB&J sandwiches in brown paper bags or the do-it-yourself Lunchables that my classmates brought to school every day. But most importantly, I hated the way I could not stop being embarrassed of my differences.

As I grew up, I consistently performed well in class, but occasionally struggled to understand unfamiliar directions. By the time I was in college and taking the required first-year writing seminar, I worked with my professor to catch many detrimental habits as a writer. Together, we found that I was an abstract thinker, especially because I would try to incorporate multiple ideas and concepts. Therefore, naturally, writing happens when I want to organize my ideas or when I want to process intangible information in my mind in a more physical form. Also, I recognized my tendency to fully dissect a rubric before jumping into writing. In hindsight, these habits (abstract thoughts and need for clear instructions for a starting point) may have formed due to my cultural background that does not stem from a western worldview. 

Much research shows that culture can influence the way people think, experience, and write. According to Richard E. Nisbett (2003), “East Asian thought tends to be more holistic…They also emphasize change, and they recognize contradiction and the need for multiple perspectives, searching for the ‘Middle Way’ between opposing propositions.” Meanwhile, Westerners incorporate formal logic, categories, and rules to analytically explain phenomena. This stems from the different classical philosophies that the East and West based their ideas upon. Many Eastern countries based scholarly knowledge through the works of Lao Tzu and Confucius, while Western countries emphasized the works of Aristotle, Cicero, and other classical Greek and Roman teachers.

As many non-Western students are either not familiar with such Sophistic and Aristotelian-based style of writing or are confused by the necessity of it, understanding the historical and philosophical background of Eastern rhetoric could better allow educators to recognize the variety of ways to think about the student writing process. Teachers, as well as students, would greatly benefit from understanding different worldviews and being more open to various writing processes to give and receive appropriate guidance. 

In addition to historical differences, modern scholars in the field of composition stress the importance of understanding how different experiences (including cultural) and backgrounds can impact the writing process. First and foremost, goal-setting and understanding the purpose behind a lesson are important processes for students as well as teachers to go through when they begin learning or teaching something new. Nonetheless, these goals and rules of English writing are systematically created by those who have been taught with a Western worldview and most likely with Aristotelian and other classical Greek/Roman rhetorical strategies. For instance, concepts like Aristotle’s three rhetorical appeals (ethos, pathos, and logos) or Cicero’s five canons of rhetoric (invention, arrangement, expression, memory, and delivery) are popular concepts immersed in secondary English classrooms and college English courses. This is further stressed in most educational settings, whether it is in a writing center or a first-year composition classroom – the end goal oftentimes has become learning how to write well from a structural or grammatical standpoint. Then, the question becomes whose standard of “good writing” are instructors and tutors thinking of as they guide students?

One way to embrace cultural differences as some experts suggest is through a form of reflection to allow a deeper understanding of the writing process instead of forcing concepts that may not make sense to students due to their different backgrounds. In “Documenting and Discovering Learning: Reimagining the Work of the Literacy Narrative,” Julie Lindquist and Bump Halbritter make an interesting point that “…writing is positioned as a means of learning, rather than as the goal of learning” (417). With a shift in focus of the learning process, such a perspective would definitely change the way both student and teacher alike experience the learning process. Furthermore, the authors suggest that the writing process itself is a “system of informed reflection and that it becomes “an authentic expression of self-realization” (Lindquist & Halbritter, 423). By understanding the socio-cultural background and the experiential history of the student, the teacher gains a deeper insight into how to lead the writer towards his/her development. In this way, the writing process itself becomes a part of the writer’s identity. 

The abstract concepts of discovering identity through narrative writing are more concretely exemplified in Talking Back as Bell Hooks explores her own interest in African-American poetry, the significance of finding a voice, and the notion of speaking out. Through her life experiences, Hooks learns to find her “authentic voice” and finds out there can be a variety of voices and not just a single definitive voice. Also, she points out that due to different cultural contexts, students may fear speaking out in the classroom, especially if the student feels that his/her narrative is unrelatable and might be criticized by peers who have had different experiences. Hooks also asserts that dominant societies may lump the voices of marginalized groups, despite the fact that within a minority group there may be a range of narratives that do not deserve to be forcefully limited in a single category. (As a Korean-American who grew up in an immigrant family myself, the points that Hooks makes really hit home.)

In contrast to Hooks and her perspective on narrative writing as an African-American woman, in “Writing on the Bias,” Linda Brodkey writes about her own experiences of white middle-class culture. Brodkey describes her writing process as beginning when something replays in her mind again and again. Moreover, she argues the importance of writing “on the bias” (Brodkey, 546). Can Brodkey be comfortable enough to express her biases while hoping other writers do so as well because she was privileged to do so in white middle-class culture? Would a non-white writer be able to experience the satisfaction of openly writing with bias just as easily? Upon synthesizing Brodkey’s family background, her experiences as a child, and her particular viewpoints as well as Hooks’ narrative, the reader can understand both authors’ perspectives after holistically reading about their socio-cultural backgrounds. 

Just like a doctor or a nurse may ask a patient a list of questions regarding his/her family medical history as well as personal medical history, an educator might want to invest some time to purposefully comprehend the literacy narrative of a student. As Lindquist and Halbritter propose that “…any act of literacy entails not only genre-specific understanding but also situated awarenesses of socio-rhetorical implications and engagements,” perhaps there are some hidden treasures behind understanding a writer’s own narrative before jumping straight into the mechanical aspects of learning how to write (Lindquist and Halbritter, 437).

Each writer most likely experiences various dilemmas regarding the writing process. Nonetheless, I have recognized my good and bad habits of writing through my own cultural experiences and background. (I am sure there are other habits that I haven’t realized too.) Wouldn’t it be worth a try for instructors and tutors to understand a bit of the students’ cultural background and narratives before jumping in to help them with their writing?  


References

Brodkey, Linda. “Writing on the Bias.” College English, vol. 56, no. 5, 1994, pp. 527–547. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/378605

Confucius. The Analects of Confucius: a Philosophical Translation. New York: Ballantine Books, 1999.

Choi, Young Jun, “Yonsei GSIS: Comparison of Eastern and Western Civilizations Lecture” October 2014. New Millenium Hall. Seoul, South Korea.

Jensen, J. V., Rhetorical emphasis of Taoism. Rhetorica, 5(3), 219-229, 1987

Lao-Tzu. Tao Te Ching

Lindquist, Julie, and Bump Halbritter. “Documenting and Discovering Learning: Reimagining the Work of the Literacy Narrative.” College Composition and Communication, vol. 70, no. 3, 2019, pp. 413-445

Lu, Xing & Frank, David A. On the study of ancient Chinese rhetoric/Bian, Western Journal of Communication, 57:4, 445-463, 1993

Nisbett, Richard E. The Geography of Thought : How Asians and Westerners Think Differently– and Why. New York :Free Press, 2003.

Williams, James D. An Introduction to Classical Rhetoric: Essential Readings. Wiley-Blackwell, 2009.