About this ebook
Getting stuck is a normal part of the writing process, even for experienced writers. My aim in publishing this Short Guide is to help you generate new writing projects, keep your writing projects moving forward, and ensure that your writing process results in publications.
A Short Guide to the Scholarly Writing Process focuses on writing as a process, from your initial curiosity about a topic or question, through the development of arguments, the identification of potential readers, the specification of a product, and the refinement of your writing for publication in a specific form. Advice about each stage of the process is accompanied by writing prompts to help you apply that advice in your own particular circumstances.
I suggest reading through the Guide once to get a sense of how the whole thing fits together. Then, whenever you are stuck with a writing project, go to the part that speaks to what you need in that moment. Use the questions in that section to get things moving.
I encourage you to actually write out answers to the questions. You are a writer. Writing is how you process your thoughts. Depending on where you are stuck, it might even be appropriate to write your answers in your project document.
Short Guides #1, 9500 words approx
Jo VanEvery
Jo VanEvery transforms academic lives from surviving to thriving. She used to be an academic sociologist and then a program officer for a funding agency. Now she helps you juggle your myriad responsibilities, provides a structure so you can get more writing done, helps you clarify your vision and make a plan for the next part of the path towards it, and boosts your confidence so you can do the work that makes your heart sing. She has been supporting scholarly writers through A Meeting With Your Writing and the Academic Writing Studio since 2011. You can read more of her writing on her website, http://jovanevery.ca; follow her on Twitter, https://twitter.com/JoVanEvery; or like her Facebook page, https://www.facebook.com/JoVEAcademicCareerCoach/ .
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The Scholarly Writing Process - Jo VanEvery
Preface: How to use this Short Guide
The Short Guides series is intended to help you when you are stuck. Each Short Guide focuses on one area of your academic life, complementing advice with writing prompts to help you apply that advice in your own particular circumstances.
A Short Guide to the Scholarly Writing Process focuses on writing as a process, from your initial curiosity about a topic or question, through the development of arguments, the identification of potential readers, the specification of a product, and the refinement of your writing for publication in a specific form.
I suggest reading through the Guide once to get a sense of how the whole thing fits together. Then leave it somewhere accessible. Whenever you are stuck with a writing project, go to the part that speaks to what you need in that moment. Use the questions in that section to get things moving.
I encourage you to actually write out answers to the questions. You are a writer. Writing is how you process your thoughts. Depending on where you are stuck, it might even be appropriate to write your answers in your project document.
Getting stuck is a normal part of the writing process, even for experienced writers. My aim in publishing this Short Guide is to help you generate new writing projects, keep your writing projects moving forward, and ensure that your writing process results in publications. Keep this guide close by and refer to it whenever you need to.
Enjoy your writing!
Introduction: Writing as Process & Product
The term writing
is commonly used to describe both the act of articulating thoughts on paper (or it’s electronic equivalent) and the product of that process of articulation. This can create confusion in advice about writing. Are we talking about the product or the process? Which one should we be talking about?
Scientists have stopped debating whether light is a particle or a wave and accepted that it is both at the same time, even though you can only deal with it as a particle or a wave at any particular time. I suggest we do the same in our discussion of writing.
Writing is a process through which you create knowledge.
AND
Writing is a product that communicates knowledge.
To understand how to improve both process and product, we need to separate them heuristically. The process of communicating your work with others (which we call publication) goes on at the same time as the process of developing your ideas and arguments so that they are fit to be communicated with others. Neither the process nor the product is more important. Sometimes you focus on the process. Other times you focus on the product/publication. The shift in focus becomes a kind of dance.
Furthermore, because writing is so tied up with your identity, many of your struggles with writing are emotional. You have an emotional attachment to being competent, to being right, to being