1 / 28

An Approach to Successful Writing

An Approach to Successful Writing. Practice the skills that improve clarity. Isn’t your objective to clearly convey the message? Shorter is generally better than longer. As long as the topic is covered extra words do not serve a useful purpose. Revision and Editing. These are not the same.

Jimmy
Download Presentation

An Approach to Successful Writing

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. An Approach to Successful Writing • Practice the skills that improve clarity. • Isn’t your objective to clearly convey the message? • Shorter is generally better than longer. • As long as the topic is covered extra words do not serve a useful purpose. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  2. Revision and Editing • These are not the same. • Revision is about ensuring that the document meets your object. • Revision is the overall structure of the document. • Editing is about improving clarity. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  3. Revision guidelines • Does the document meet its purpose? • Does the document make sense? • Is the document efficient or is it wordy? • Is the style and word choice correct for the intended purpose? • Is the organization clear? Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  4. Editing • Common errors: • Run-on sentences • Pronoun/noun agreement • Subject/verb agreement • Misuse of commas Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  5. Voice • What is voice? • In active voice the subject does the action of the verb. • In passive voice the subject receives the action of the verb. • What is the problem with passive voice? • Passive voice leaves the actor unclear. • Active voice makes it clear who is the actor. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  6. Active Voice Improving Clarity • Passive – Sections B and C should be checked for errors. (by who?) • Active – Check sections B and C for errors. (you is implied) • Passive – Hurrying to complete the work, the cables were connected improperly. (who is hurrying?) • Active – Hurrying to complete the work the technician connected the cables improperly. • The actor is clearly identified. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  7. Active Voice • The agency reported that the new model was defective. (active) • It was reported by the agency that the new model was defective. (passive) • The problem was discovered yesterday • (passive) • The Maintenance Department discovered the problem yesterday. • (active) Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  8. Active Voice • Active voice avoids wordiness. • Changes in policy are resented by employees. • Employees resent changes in policy. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  9. When to use Passive Voice • Use passive voice when the performer is unimportant. • Use passive voice when diplomacy requires not identifying the performer. • Do not use passive voice as an excuse to hide information. • Engineers do not always want to fix responsibility. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  10. Punctuation • Commas are used to set off individual elements and thoughts. • Commas add to clarity. • To be successful managers with MBAs must continue to learn. • To be successful, managers with MBAs must continue to learn. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  11. Commas avoid confusion • Leonora walked on her head, a little higher than usual. • Did she walk on her head? • Leonora walked on, her head a little higher than usual. • The driver managed to escape from the vehicle before it sank and swam to the river-bank. • Did the vehicle swim? • The driver manager to escape from the vehicle before it sank, and swam to the river-bank. • The convict said the judge is mad. • Who is really mad? • The convict, said the judge, is mad. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  12. AAAWWUBBIS • What does this mean? Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  13. AAAWWUBBIS • After • Although • As • When • While • Until • Before • Because • If • Since Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  14. AAAWWUBBIS • When one of these words start a sentence, you will probably need a comma somewhere in the sentence. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  15. Gender Neutral • Write gender neutral when possible. • One solution is to reword and use a plural pronoun or use genderless nouns. • Every employee must sign his/her time card. • Not gender neutral • Every employee must sign their time cards. • Incorrect agreement • All employees must sign their time cards Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  16. Style • Use parallel structure to keep ideas at a consistent level. • When using parallel structure make sure the items are comparable. • The company offers special college training to help nonexempt employees move into professional careers like engineering management, software development, service technicians, and sales trainees. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  17. Style • Keep paragraphs short. • No more than six sentences • Give paragraphs unity and coherence • Decide if you are being formal or informal. • Use a tone that is appropriate for your audience. • Be selective in using humor especially when you have a multi-cultural audience. • Avoid assuming the reader has reached the same conclusion you have. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  18. Transitions • Transitions smooth the flow of ideas. • Ways to achieve transitions. • Using transitional words • Repeating words or ideas • Using pronouns • Numbering • Transitional paragraphs Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  19. Transitions • Focus on transitions between paragraphs not sentences. • Transitions within paragraphs can add unneeded words. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  20. Plain English • Avoid using overly technical language when possible. • “Turn the light switch” on rather than “manipulate the switch so that positive electrical contact is made.” • Keep it short and simple. • Be consistent. • Avoid unnecessary words. • Often we add words too meet a page or word count. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  21. Bestsellers • What makes a book a bestseller? • How does a bestseller differ from a technical book or journal? • Is there something we can learn from bestsellers? Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  22. Examples • The next two slides were taken from the bestseller “The Art of Racing in the Rain” by Garth Stein Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  23. Examples • “Denny was so angry that his anger filled up the entire room, the entire house.” Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  24. Example • “When Denny came home from work, he would first say hello to the girls, then he would take me outside to the yard and throw the ball, which I happily retrieved.” Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  25. Examples from Harry Potter • “And the more I’ve read about them,” said Hermione, “the more horrible they seem, and the less I can believe that he actually made six.” Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  26. Examples from Harry Potter • His voice tailed away: He was thinking of all of the things he should have asked Dumbledore, and of how, since the headmaster had died, it seemed to Harry that he had wasted so many opportunities when Dumbledore had been alive, to find out more … to find out everything…. Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  27. What was in that sentence? • Colons can introduce lists. • A colon can also introduce a complete sentence. • Was there a compound sentence? Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

  28. Common Pit Falls • Every sentence must have an explicit subject. • Every sentence must have a verb. • The subject and the verb must agree. • Every sentence must express an idea. • Can/may • Can refers to capability • May refers to possibility or permission Computer Engineering 294 R. Smith Writing Skills 09/2009

More Related