Prewriting Tech PDF
Prewriting Tech PDF
Prewriting Tech PDF
Pre-Writing Techniques
• Brainstorming
• Discussing
• Free Writing
• Looping
• Outlining
• Mapping
• Journalistic Questions
What is Pre-Writing?
• Prewriting is a term that describes any kind of
preliminary work that precedes the actual
paper writing.
• Helps us discover our initial ideas about a
subject, and put them on paper, though not
usually in an organized form.
• Helps to calm down our nerves.
Brainstorming
• “Brainstorming” means thinking of as
many ideas as possible in a short amount
of time. It is also called Listing.
• In brainstorming you write down your
ideas so that you don’t forget them.
• You should write down everything that
comes to your mind; don’t worry about
sorting out “good” and “bad” ideas.
Example: Brainstorming for Toni
Morrison's Beloved.
• Sethe's relationship with her children.
• Significance of milk and the mother feeding it. Possible connection
to mother/child relationship.
• Familial relationships under slavery. Perhaps Morrison is examining
(or complicating) this through Sethe's extreme relationship with her
children. Possible connection to milk and breast imagery.
Breastfeeding her children may be so important because
mother/child relationships are often destroyed under slavery.
• Motherly love. Seethe seems to think murder can be taken as an act
of motherly love. Maybe she's rewriting the role of the mother
under slavery.
• Return of Beloved and inability to explain/justify murder. Even
though Sethe claims that the murder was right, she seems
conflicted.
Discussing
• “Discussing” is similar to brainstorming,
but you do it with a partner or group.
• Assign one person to write down the
ideas.
• Write down everything that group
members say related to the topic; don’t
worry about sorting out “good” and
“bad” ideas.
Free Writing
• “Free Writing” is like pouring all of your
thoughts onto paper.
• Don’t take your pen off the page; keep
writing for the entire time.
• If you don’t know what to write, write
“I don’t know what to write” and try to
explain the reasons why cannot write
until you do.
• Don’t try to sort “good” and “bad” ideas.
Example of Freewriting
I have to write a paper on Beloved for my English class. There's a lot
to write on in this book. When I first read it, I noticed a lot of things
about Sethe and her relationship with her kids. Her motherly
relationship with her children seemed important to her, especially in
terms of her feeding them the milk. Perhaps this is symbolic of
something. Like milk and the mother feeding it represent
motherhood itself. This might be why it was so important for Sethe
to get milk to her baby; she may have wanted to retain that motherly
bond. Perhaps that's important because of the fact that slavery
interferes with the mother/child relationship. In slavery, Sethe and
her children are just her master's property, so she's not the ultimate
guardian/owner of them. Maybe breastfeeding is her way of
reestablishing the bond that slavery attempts to destroy by making
humans into property.
Looping
• Looping is a continuation of free-writing.
It involves taking a sentence or idea out of
a free-writing product and using that as a
basis for additional free-writing.
• Choose the best idea, word, or phrase
from what you wrote; underline or circle it.
• Take that idea and begin free writing
again.
Outlining
• “Outlining” is a more organized form of
pre-writing than the others we discussed.
• It can be used after you have generated
ideas through brainstorming, free writing,
or other pre-writing techniques.
• It works well for structured types of
writing such as essays.
• You can use complete sentences, but you
don’t have to.
Example: Outline for an essay on Beloved.
Introduction
—Focus on how Morrison highlights the importance of history in terms of slavery and
the African American community in her book.