Easy Learning Writing: Your essential guide to accurate English
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About this ebook
Collins Easy Learning Writing is an easy-to-use guide on how to write good, clear and effective English.
With simple explanations of everything from the basics of sentence and paragraph structure, to writing CVs, letters and essays, this e-book is a valuable guide for anyone who wants to improve their writing.
Collins Easy Learning Writing is the helpful guide to good written style. Covering areas such as sentence structure, punctuation and page layout, all users of English will appreciate the clear advice provided in this e-book.
Each point is described in a user-friendly format, with corpus examples that show how English is really used today.
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Book preview
Easy Learning Writing - HarperCollins UK
Preparing to write
PART ONE
Preparing to write
Thinking about your writing
Whatever you are writing, it is important to think about it first.
If you plan your writing well, it will be clear, logical and effective.
You may think that planning your writing is just one extra job, and a waste of time, but in fact good planning will probably save you time as well as making your writing better.
Planning does not necessarily take a lot of time, and you do not always need to make a written plan. For instance, it would be silly to make a written plan for a text message – the whole point is that texting is a quick way of communicating. However, even with a text message, you should plan in your mind, so that you know what you want to say.
For longer pieces of writing, such as essays, reports, and often even letters, it is very useful to make a written plan. A plan will help you:
• organize your thoughts
• make sure you are clear about what you want to write
• make sure you have all the information you need
• make sure you don’t leave anything out
Key point to remember
Planning will save you time and make your writing more effective.
Before you start to write, the most important question to ask yourself is: What am I trying to achieve?
The best way to be clear about this is to ask three questions:
1. Who is this writing for?
2. What do I want to say?
3. Why do I want to say it?
Imagine, for example, that you really like animals, and you need a holiday job, so you decide to write to the local zoo. In this case, the answers to the questions above could be:
1. The manager or personnel officer of the zoo.
2. That you want a summer holiday job. That you love animals and worked on a farm last year.
3. Because you want to get a holiday job in a zoo.
There are important points to remember about each of these questions:
• Who? Make sure that you use a suitable style and tone for your audience. Informal language and jokes are fine for your friends, but a job application needs to be more formal.
• What? Make sure that what you say is absolutely clear, and that you have included everything you wanted to include.
• Why? Make sure the letter achieves what you want it to achieve. For instance, if you write a letter of complaint, be clear about what you want to happen: are you writing it because you want an apology, or do you want your money back?
Before starting to write, it can sometimes be helpful to make a brief summary of what you are trying to achieve. This can help you to concentrate on the most important points of your writing.
When you have finished your writing, you can go back to your summary and check that what you have written achieves what you wanted it to. A good summary will always answer the questions, who?, what? and why?
Here are two examples of this kind of summary:
A survey of students’ opinions of the food in our school canteen, to be used as the basis of a campaign for better school meals.
A letter of complaint to the manager of the local theatre to say that our recent visit was spoiled by the noise of building work going on in the bar area, and to ask for our money back.
Your summary can also help you resist the temptation to add too many details or extra points. Remember that many people are busy – if they do not understand your main points quickly, you may not achieve what you hope to achieve.
Key point to remember
Always be clear about the purpose of your writing.
Organizing your ideas
Whatever you are planning to write, you need to organize your ideas, either on paper, on your computer, or in your head.
There are several good things about this stage of writing:
• You do not need to worry about grammar and spelling
• You do not need to write whole sentences: single words, phrases, or even pictures are fine
• You do not need to put your ideas into any kind of order to begin with – that can come later
• The act of writing things down can give you new ideas
It is also fine to write down things that you don’t know!
Say, for instance, you are writing an essay about the causes of the First World War, a subject you have been studying in class. You might write down the things you know about, e.g. the Alliances between different countries, the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand, the struggle between Britain and Germany to have military control of the seas.
Then you can add things you do not know, but think you ought to include in your essay. Examples might be: why were these Alliances formed?; who killed Franz Ferdinand and why?; what role did imperialism play in the arguments between countries?
These questions will help you to see what further research you need to do.
Tip for success
If you write down your ideas, you will not forget them!
When you have written down all your ideas, you need to put them in some kind of order. If you have a very clear idea of what your writing will contain, it may be possible to do this right from the beginning.
One simple way to order your ideas is to list them under different headings.
For instance, this writer is planning an article for her student magazine about working holidays abroad:
It can be useful to be able to move your ideas around.
One possibility is to use Post-it® notes (small pieces of paper with one sticky edge) and arrange them on a table or a wall.
Imagine you are writing a party invitation. You want to include the date and time of the party, what it’s celebrating, that you need a reply to your invitation, that friends and partners are welcome and that you’d like people to bring drinks.
If you write all those things on Post-it® notes, you can make sure you include all the points you want to, and in the best order.
A very flexible way of ordering ideas is to use mind maps, or spider maps. In these maps, you start with the most important, central idea, and work out from there, using branches leading outwards. The more detailed the idea, the further the branches are from the central point.
This writer is planning to write a leaflet about what we can do to protect the environment:
Tip for success
A good mind map will help you structure your writing by showing you how points relate to each other.
Another method that is suitable for some kinds of writing is a flow chart. This writer is planning a letter to the local council to ask for repairs to the public football pitch:
Tip for success
As well as the things you want to write, your flow chart can include things you need to do, for example finding out a name or address, finding information (e.g. a bank account number) or filling in a form you need to enclose.
Research
For some pieces of writing, especially longer pieces, you will need to do some research. How much you need to do will depend on the information you already have and the amount of detail your writing needs.
If you are a student, your teacher will be able to help. They may give you a list of books or websites to use.
Think about whether there is anybody you know who could give you information, or at least tell you the best place to look. Perhaps you have a neighbour who works at the local museum, a relative who was alive during the Second World War, or a friend who is crazy about sport?
A good place to do research is the library. Books will be arranged by subject, so it is easy to find what you want. Many libraries also have computerized systems, which allow you to look for books in several ways, for example:
• by subject
• by keywords in the title (important words that give a clue to what the book is about)
• by author
• by date of publication
It is often useful to ask the librarians for help. They will know about all the different sources of information, some of which may not be in book form. For example, many libraries have copies of old newspapers in a photographed form, which you need a special machine to read.
Using the Internet is a quick and useful way to research a topic. However, it is important to remember that absolutely anyone can put information on a website. You need to make sure that any source you use is suitable.
A good starting point is to ask two questions:
• Who wrote the information you are looking at?
• What is the purpose of the site where you found it?
Answering these questions will help you to think about two further questions:
• Is this information likely to be reliable?
• Is the information likely to be fair, or does the writer have a particular purpose, such as supporting an opinion or trying to make you buy something?
Using a search engine such as Google®, Yahoo® or Alta Vista® can be a start, but there is a danger that you find so many sites that you miss the ones which are really important. Many teachers and lecturers include websites on their reading lists, so if you have been given a reading list, make sure you use it. Otherwise, think about sites that will be reliable. For instance, in the UK you might look for medical information on the National Health Service site. In Australia, you might look for news information on the ABC site.
Tip for success
If you are using the Internet in a library, the librarian may be able to help you find suitable sites.
Making notes and summaries
When you are doing research, you will want to make notes.
Your notes can be in whatever form suits you best. The important thing is to make sure you will still understand them when you come to use them!
Do make sure that the notes you take relate to the subject you will be writing about. There is no point adding extra information – however interesting it is – that you will not be able to use.
Notes should be short – do not copy out huge pieces of text.
In order to summarize, it is very important to make sure you have understood the main points. When you have read a chapter or an article, it can be useful to try to write down the most important three or four points in it.
Look for clues in what you are reading to help you:
• Are there any words that are underlined or in heavy type?
• Do the headings summarize the main points?
• Does the book itself include summaries or lists of main points?
Do use abbreviations, shorten words or miss out words altogether. ‘Romans > Britain 55BC’ is much more efficient than writing ‘The Romans came to Britain in 55BC.’
Key point to remember
Make sure you will be able to understand your notes when you need to use them.
If you have a good idea of the structure of your piece of writing, it can be useful to organize your notes.
For example, if you are writing an essay about a book you have read, you may be asked to look at particular things, such as the way the author builds up characters; the style of language used; the way the plot develops; the author’s relationship with the reader.
If you divide your paper into themes like these, you can order your notes as you take them. This will make it easier to organize your essay, and also help you balance the amounts of material you have on each theme.
You may use your notes to record good quotations to use in your own writing, but be careful:
• If you use a direct quotation, you must produce it accurately, and you must say where it has come from.
• If you summarize what someone has said, you must change it into your own words. Copying the words of others is called plagiarizing. It is not allowed in academic work, and it can be illegal.
Tip for success
While you are making notes, keep a list of useful words and phrases to use in your own writing.
Outlines
For longer pieces of writing, it is useful to produce an outline before you start. An outline can have as much or as little in it as you think will be useful for you, but it should at least include a basic list of headings. If you have organized your ideas and notes in some of the ways suggested above, you will probably find it quite easy to produce an outline.
Start by picking out a number of main points – these will be the main frame for your writing, and will lead to more detailed points within them.
For some types of writing, such as a report, it may be appropriate to keep these headings in the final text. For others, the headings will simply be a way of organizing your writing and will not appear in your finished work.
You can use your outline to check that everything you want to write is in a logical order:
• Make sure that understanding one part does not rely on another part that comes later
• If you move on to a different point, see if it needs some sort of introduction or explanation
• Make sure that all the points connected to a particular theme are treated together
The person who made this outline is writing a report on the use of volunteers in a local charity:
Volunteer report
Introduction
• What this report covers
• Research and methods used
• Purpose of report
Summary of main points
The current situation
• number of volunteers
• what they do
• how they are managed
Problems with the current situation
• not enough volunteers
• volunteers not clear about their role
• lack of communication with paid staff
Suggestions for improvement
• better targeting of recruitment campaigns
• written handbook for volunteers
• regular staff/volunteer meetings
Conclusion
Key point to remember
Use your outline to make sure everything is included and in the best order.
Writing a draft
A draft is a rough version of your finished writing. It can be as close to or as far away from the final text as you like. For instance, you may decide to concentrate on the content and not worry about spelling and punctuation – that is up to you.
If you are writing something very long, or very important, you may write more than one draft.
When you have written a draft, it is useful to ask the following questions:
• Does the order of what is written make sense?
• Have you included everything you wanted to include?
• Is all the material relevant? Is there anything you should cut out?
• Is the tone right? For instance, if it is a letter of complaint, is it firm and assertive or is it offensive and rude?
• Does any part need more explanation, more information or more evidence?
• Is the amount of space given to each theme appropriate, or is one part too long or too short?
• Does it achieve what you want it to achieve (if you wrote a brief summary at the beginning, you can check against it)?
It can sometimes be useful to give a draft of your writing to someone else, and ask if what you have written is clear, interesting, and effective. That person might make suggestions for additions or improvements, or check facts for you.
Key point to remember
Do not expect to produce a perfect piece of writing first time. Many people write two or more drafts of an important piece of writing before they are satisfied with it.
Presentation
Presentation
General layout
A clear and attractive layout will make your texts both more enjoyable to read and easier to understand.
The use of computers makes it easy for everyone to present their writing in a professional way, and gives us lots of choices about how to do this. One of the most useful things about using a computer is that you can edit text and move it around as you work. You can experiment with different ways of presenting it – you do not have to decide on your layout at the beginning.
Here are some