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Flourish:
An Electronic Newsletter for Scholarly Writers
November
2006
vol.
2, no. 11
The
world is not divided into winners and losers. It is divided
unevenly between those who persist despite their own failures
and those who don't. Whatever you think your failure has
been this past week--not writing well enough, not writing
fast enough, not writing at all--it is your ability
to get past those failures that makes you a writer. Not
talent, not speed, not hours, but persistence. So, repeat
after me, "I am a writer and I write." Then prove
it.
Tricks
for the Busy
As
many of you know, I recommend writing daily, even when you
are very busy. Just a few minutes spent on your article
or book keeps the material on the front burner, cooking,
rather than in the deep freeze, getting petrified. But it
is easy to get distracted by teaching and family demands.
What to do? One of the Norwegian political scientists I
recently worked with came up with an excellent idea. When
he sits down at his computer, the first thing he does is
open the electronic file of the article he is working on.
Then he doesn't close it until he is turning off the computer.
This makes working on the article frictionless. He finds
that he will click over from reading his email to add a
sentence he just thought of or he will get off the phone
with a colleague to include a citation. If your problem
is that many days you cannot get to your computer, try carrying
around a print out of your article. If you always have it
with you, once a day you can use some of your time on the
bus, while stuck in line, or waiting for a friend to review
and revise. If you have a trick for writing daily, let me
know!
Readers
Write in with Answers
Linda
McPhee , another person who specializes in holding academic
writing workshops for scholars, wrote in regarding last
month's tip about printing out essays when you lose the
thread:
Another
nice trick for organizing things once you've printed out
a draft is to use colored markers for different themes.
You can draw a colored line down the left margin every time
a particular topic is mentioned and then read all the “yellow”
sentences together (for example) to see whether the story
is coherent or whether anything needs to be moved, added,
or subtracted. Then read all the red parts together, and
then all the green, and so on. Also, you can check how you're
moving through the colors and whether or not a pattern is
developing (for instance, most of the yellow together or
yellow-green-red). Does that have any implications? Finally,
of course, if some sections have no colors, why they are
there? Do you need to add a color (for instance, for background
information) or delete those sentences?
Readers
Write in with Questions
Flourish reader Epifania
Amoo-Adare wrote in asking about whether anyone knew of a
postdoc chat room or virtual postdoc writing support group.
If you do, please let me know so I can post it. If anyone
is interested in trying to start one with Epifania, please
email the Flourish
editor to be forwarded to her.
Tomorrow's
Professor Newsletter
Richard Reis, the author of
the best-selling book Tomorrow's
Professor: Preparing for Academic Careers in Science and Engineering
, has a desktop faculty development newsletter that goes
out twice a week to over 25,000 subscribers. Sponsored by
the Stanford University Center for Teaching and Learning,
it addresses various aspects of being an academic and frequently
reprints interesting items from relevant blogs, books, and
discussion lists. Last week he kindly reprinted the journal
rejection issue of Flourish in his newsletter. You can read
previous postings at the website
or go to the Tomorrow's
Professor Blog . Anyone can subscribe to the Tomorrows-Professor
Mailing List by going to the sign-up
page .
News
from the Editor
I
just returned from holding workshops at the University of
Virginia. UVA is ahead of its time in having a full professional
development program for faculty and graduate students. The
Teaching Resource Center
, led by Professor Marva Barnett for over fifteen years
now, has expanded to include writing
activities , providing not only writing workshops and
peer writing groups but also funding for faculty to hire
writing coaches and editors. I wish every university had
such a center! They invited me to hold two one-day workshops
on getting published in peer-reviewed journals and it was
an interesting experience for me since I usually work with
those in the humanities and social sciences, not those in
the sciences. Yet several scientists asked to participate
and we had some good discussions about the differences among
the disciplines and the challenges that all writers face.
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