Having been born in the Chinese Year of the Horse, I plan to take January 31, 2014 big. This link gives ideas for a delightful party. Thank you, fizzyparty.com and Happy New Year everyone!
Tuesday, January 28, 2014
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Tools for Writing an Essay
Cubing
a Topic - a guest post by Nikolas Baron
(Nikolas works for GRAMMARLY, a commercial site offering interesting tools for writers. He's developing guest blogs and is fun to correspond with.)
Coming up with a topic is usually the easy part of writing any essay. We all have a pretty good idea of what interests us and what we want to write about. Of course, when we sit down to actually write the essay, we hit a wall. After all, what do we need to know about our topic? Where do we even begin learning what we need to know about our topic? Blech. Even looking at those questions overwhelms us. In my work for Grammarly, I study the tools people use to become better writers, and I think there are a number of underused techniques for tackling a topic, which any writer would be well-suited to add to his or her toolbelt. One such technique is “cubing” a topic, which involves the writer looking at his or her topic from six sides (like a cube), the culmination of which is an extremely informed perspective on whatever the writer has chosen to write about.
If you're an educator, cubing is
an extremely valuable tool for your students, especially when they haven't
given as much thought to their topic as they should before they start writing
about it. Traditionally, to cube, students were given a blank cube and asked to
write their response quickly on each side. Personally, I think cubing works
best when you have your students take each “side” of the cube in order, giving
them ample time to consider their topic from that angle and write about it. For
best results, I would recommend spending ten to fifteen minutes on each side.
While this take on cubing may lose some of the flair of the original shape, it
does give writers of all skill levels an easy technique for them to deeply
examine their topic.
Let's get started.
Side 1 – Description:
For this side, have your students describe their topic the best as
they can, using everyday words and descriptions.
Side 2 – Compare: Then,
ask your students to compare their topic to something similar. What are the two
topics' similarities or differences?
Side 3 – Associate: Ask
your students what else their topic makes them think of. What do they associate
with their topic?
Side 4 – Analyze: At this
point, your students will be getting into the real meat of the topic. This side
requires them to break their topic into specific components, describing
causality, relationships, and effects.
Side 5 – Application:
How important is the topic to the real world? Is it functional? Abstract? What
sort of relationship does it have to people? Environment? Culture? Ask your
students: if they were to remove the topic from existence, would anything
happen?
Side 6 – Argument: This
final side is the most difficult: asking students to argue for or against their
topic. How important is it? Do they agree with it? Do they disagree with it?
Within this side, they must also start to develop their argument with
supporting facts. Why do they agree with it? Why do they disagree with it?
You might have noticed that in
the above list, Side 1 is a relatively simple request, while Side 6
requires much more information and
attention. The idea behind cubing is a gradual progression from the beginning
of a topic (the surface, physical description) to the inner depths (value
judgment), so that by the end of the exercise, the writer will have a firm
enough grasp on his or her topic that he or she will be able to begin writing a
piece with the confidence that comes only from time and deep thought about a
particular subject.
Of course, once your students
have a great, well-developed topic, their essay will really start to shine. If
you want them to really polish it, however, they'll want to be sure that it
looks good on a technical level, and that's where tools like Grammarly.com come
in. Over at Grammarly, we offer an extremely sophisticated grammar check that
examines a piece for over 250 common grammatical errors. By combining a
well-thought-out topic with a strong technical foundation, the end result is an
excellent essay that would make any teacher proud.
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Labels:
children's creative writing,
essay writing
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