
The truth is, you might want to be a pantser (and you might learn to be later), but right now it is likely best if you try the plotter method. It is too easy at this stage to just start writing about something, accidentally take a sharp left turn, and end up nowhere near where you want to be. So try making a plan, otherwise known as an outline.
(I had a student years ago who liked to pants it when he wrote. If the prompt said “describe the Death Star” he would start, meander, spin around twice, and end up writing about an X-Wing Fighter. It was not effective, and he learned how to do better.)
How detailed you want to be is up to you, but the more details you can add, the more writing your journal or essay becomes a matter of connecting the dots. At the very least, your outline should include: your general thesis, your supporting arguments (including the citations you plan to use), and any original ideas you have for the conclusion.
It may feel like outlining is a waste of time, but in reality, getting lost is the waste of time. Doubling back, ending up at a dead end, and going in circles can take hours. So if you are trying to be a good writer AND effective with your time, this is one of the first strategies you should try.
Bonus outlining tip: Try color!
My daughter liked to color-code her outline; each argument had its own
color – say green – and every point within that argument would be a different
shade of green (jade, turquoise, lime, etc.) This works well if you are an
extremely visual person, and/or if you are writing something longer, like a
multi-page essay, where you have more than one point to make for each specific
argument. It’s not for everyone, but if your brain gets happy at the thought,
give it a try.
Ms. Nan
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