How to Write A Seminar Paper. Part II: Writing Strategies. A Yale Graduate Writing Center Workshop Series

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How to Write A Seminar Paper A Yale Graduate Writing Center Workshop Series Part II: Writing Strategies Tuesday, November 3, 2015 5:30-6:45pm HGS 116 (320 York St) Register on the Graduate Writing Center website at http://ctl.yale.edu/ writing/graduate

HOW TO WRITE A SEMINAR PAPER Part II: Writing Strategies

Plan Getting Started Structuring & Drafting Your Paper Joining the Conversation Survival Strategies

1 GETTING STARTED What is a Graduate Seminar Paper? Your Topic

Getting Started DISCUSSION QUESTION What is a Graduate Seminar Paper? How is it different from papers you may have written before?

YOUR TOPIC

WHAT MAKES FOR A GOOD TOPIC? Your Topic An ideal paper topic is both realistic and original: realistic topic is narrow in scope paper poses a very specific question original contributes to a scholarly conversation introduces new ideas, or challenges well-established ones

Your Topic DIFFERENT APPROACHES The Controversy Paper: purports to end a controversy or debate The Gap in Scholarship Paper: presents a missing conversation in the scholarly literature The Theoretical Application: applies a theoretical approach to a text or other cultural artifact The Pragmatic Proposal: discusses a practical application of a theory

Your Topic PAPER WORKSHOP 1 Have your neighbor(s) tell you about their topic; and tell them about yours: what is the specific question your paper asks? what is your approach? what contribution to scholarship does your paper make?

2 STRUCTURING AND DRAFTING YOUR PAPER Writing Fundamentals

BUILDING YOUR ARGUMENT Making a Claim Constructing Your Argument

Building an Argument MAKING A CLAIM A claim is supported by arguments based on evidence. It acknowledges and responds to other (opposing) views, and has a principle of reasoning (warrant) and a case for its significance (stakes). Your main claim should be specific in scope substantive contestable

Building an Argument MAKING A CLAIM AN EXAMPLE

This cartoon is of a banana because it looks like a banana and it says that it is a banana. It is yellow, has the crescent shape of a banana, and exhibits the stem of a banana. The cartoon also verbally confirms that is it a banana. Although detractors may argue that it is not a banana because it has eyes, a mouth, arms and legs, c a r t o o n i s t s o f t e n anthropomorphize inanimate objects with such features. Establishing that this is a banana is essential to interpreting the cartoons meaning. Building an Argument MAKING A CLAIM AN EXAMPLE

Building an Argument THE SIGNIFICANCE OF YOUR CLAIM

Try to answer the So what? Question: establish that your claim is interesting establish that your claim is relevant to the literature. Building an Argument THE SIGNIFICANCE OF YOUR CLAIM

Building an Argument PAPER WORKSHOP 2 Formulate your claim according to this pattern, and run it by your neighbor(s) claim argument(s) evidence warrant stakes

Building an Argument CONSTRUCTING YOUR ARGUMENT articulate your argument situate your argument provide your argument

Building an Argument CONSTRUCTING YOUR ARGUMENT articulate your argument clearly formulate your claim try to think about its implications clearly outline your argument

Building an Argument CONSTRUCTING YOUR ARGUMENT situate your argument think about how your argument falls into the larger history of ideas organize the scholarship according to certain logical categories get clear on why your work is important what is your entry point / your angle

Building an Argument CONSTRUCTING YOUR ARGUMENT provide your argument collect your supporting evidence, e.g.: newly discovered artifacts or data close readings of the text unique theoretical approach or methodology anticipate and address potential objections to your argument

Writing & Organizing PAPER WORKSHOP 3 run your argument by your neighbor(s) Is it clear? Is it compelling? What are potential objections?

WRITING & ORGANIZING Writing Strategies Paper Organization

Writing & Organizing STARTING TO WRITE When do you stop reading and start trying to write? Depends on the writer! A few thoughts: Researching and writing aren t necessarily discrete stages try to articulate your paper s question or problem (different from articulating your claim/argument!)

Writing & Organizing THE WRITING PROCESS The good old-fashioned model (adapted from Arlo Guthrie)! research a topic.! make an outline.! write each section of the outline.! cap the paper off with a final summarizing paragraph.! let the paper rest for a day, then come back to revise New model (William G. Perry Jr.) start with freewriting move into more focused writing zero draft formulate your ideas in first draft first draft is followed by second, third and fourth drafts till we feel comfortable sending it off into the world

" choose and research your topic " narrow down the topic & select a question " select references " outline your argument and evidence Writing & Organizing THE WRITING PROCESS, STEP BY STEP (AFTER THE GOOD OLD-FASHIONED MODEL) " make a list of your section headings/subheadings " create your draft, writing the introduction and conclusion last.

Writing & Organizing THE MAIN PARTS OF A SEMINAR PAPER The Introduction The Body The Conclusion

Writing & Organizing THE INTRODUCTION the introduction concisely states: the background for your paper your topic the importance of your topic your claim your argument in your introduction, you clearly present your claim situate your argument explain why your argument is important or useful try to excite your reader

Writing & Organizing THE INTRODUCTION Tips for Writing comes first, but should be written last sketch beforehand read examples of introductions in your field get to the point define key terms and new terms think about your voice make sure to outline the rest of your paper

Writing & Organizing THE BODY in your paper s body, you review the literature explain your main claim lay out your arguments (starting with the most compelling) present the evidence in support of your argument some nuts & bolts: when quoting a primary or secondary source, always make sure to explain what you take it to mean/support clearly Specify: explain precisely what is meant by an abstract phrase or concept take account of contrary evidence

THE BODY Tips for Writing don t forget about your reader! Writing & Organizing make sure to guide your readers, and to speak to them do not force them to make inferences style: simple is beautiful find your own voice If you get lost during the writing process, ask yourself: What am I doing here, and why am doing it? ( So What? ) What am I focusing on, and why?

Writing & Organizing THE CONCLUSION in your conclusion, you briefly summarize your results show the bigger picture restate the articles relevance to the scholarly debate outline possible directions for future research

Writing & Organizing THE CONCLUSION Tips for Writing try to provide a sense of closure a conclusion should not be a restatement of your introduction, but another stage of thinking plan on having sufficient time to write a wellformulated, well-thought-out conclusion

Writing & Organizing PAPER WORKSHOP 4 share and evaluate your outlines How is the paper structured? Is it well-organized? (Why? Why not?) Is there something missing?

3 JOINING THE CONVERSATION Setting Your Paper in Conversation with the Scholarship

Ask yourself: Who is your audience? Joining the Conversation FRAMING YOUR PAPER FOR AN AUDIENCE # ideally, the scholarly community interested in this topic # think about this paper potentially being sent out to journal that will ask them to serve as reviewers # try to motivate the paper in a way that will interest them # make space in your paper to respond to them

Joining the Conversation FRAMING YOUR PAPER AS A CONTRIBUTION TO SCHOLARSHIP Where in your paper can you try to effect this? in your claim (originality) in the introduction (as a place to signal the debate you are part of) in the language you use in the lit review in the bibliography, citations, footnotes in responding to objections/acknowledging alternatives in your choice of topic/problem

SITUATING YOUR ARGUMENT: THE LITERATURE REVIEW aims of a literature review: situate your view highlight its significance and originality Joining the Conversation help your reader understand your position no need to exhaustively cite the literature impose some kind of typology tip: read other literature reviews to save time / develop a map of the debate

SITUATING YOUR ARGUMENT: THE LITERATURE REVIEW Joining the Conversation different ways for connecting with the literature: refine and extend offer an new way of parsing the debate argue for a gap in the literature debunk and trailblaze

Building your Argument PAPER WORKSHOP 5 explain to your neighbor how your paper engages with the literature How does your paper connect to the literature? Where in your paper do you do so / are you planning to bring it in?

4 SURVIVAL STRATEGIES Dealing With Writer s Block Tools

DEALING WITH WRITERS BLOCK Survival Strategies # if you feel so intimidated by the task that you don't know where to begin, divide the process into smaller pieces, and do them one at a time. # if you put off working on the paper because you want it to be perfect, try to accept the reality of the time pressure, and remember this is a first draft, not a final product. # if you have too many things to do and can't start writing yet, keep your topic in mind as you are doing other tasks.

Survival Strategies BECOME A WRITER! develop writing habits: Write at the same time on the same days every week Do not skip writing at your allotted time Set a concrete goal for each day of writing Create lists/tasks for each session Break writing sessions into smaller pieces Start with small sessions (~30 min) 90 min were found to be best for uninterrupted sessions Take structured breaks

Survival Strategies START USING TOOLS pomodoro method calendars reference managers outlining/drafting software task managers monitoring software meditation

Thank You!