Sunday, February 1, 2015

Academic Writing

In order to enter an academic conversation as a writer, one must fully understand the task that they are undertaking. Indeed, one should not begin with one broad and overreaching topic. Instead they should add to the "conversation," that other researches and writers have initiated in the past. This could occur in many ways. One may choose to view a topic that is being discussed from a new lens, or dive deeper and pinpoint an area of the discussion that one believes needs expanding.

First, it is important that the writer begins by addressing the part of the academic conversation that sparked their interest to join. One must somewhat restate the idea that is being responded to, and then identify how they feel about it. This may include but is not limited to whether or not the author responding agrees, disagrees, or is on the fence about the original idea, and why. Then they can continue to state their new ideas and how they connect to the former conversation.

One of the most important things to remember during this process is the audience that is being addressed. It is important for example, that if one is addressing people who are already knowledgeable in the subject that they do not over simplify things and come off as a know-it-all. On the other hand, if the writer tends to be over their audience's head when it comes to knowledge and vocabulary, they may lose interest quickly. One must always know who they are trying to talk to, and not just what content but how content needs to be presented.

Finally, in order for the piece that an author is working on to be successful they must narrow their topic. Although the idea may begin from something that can be described  "in a few words," it may eventually take a sentence to really pinpoint what the author is attempting to do. It is important to use nouns deriving from verbs, that will get you a step closer to a claim rather than a broad statement. If one can cover all of these basis, they are a step closer to being an academic writer.

2 comments:

  1. Kirsten,
    I thoroughly enjoy the different perspectives that you take on how an audience can perceive different tones that an author can take. I believe that this is an extremely important part of academic writing and that being aware of those things can further your writing skills.

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  2. I agree! And yes, it is very important to know how knowledgeable your audience is on the subject you are discussing. Like you said, the audience could lose interest if you are either talking in too simple of terms or too advanced. I like all of the points you made on how to enter the conversation as an academic writer.

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