Meetingt Deadlines

 

As a writer, you may enjoy writing process but you may be very successful at originality, and when it comes to deadline meetings….

 

This guide has been developed especially for those writers whose creative spirit hinders them from delivering papers as expected by customers.

 

As results of psychological tests demonstrate, a lot of writers have so-called “writer’s block”. You can overcome it! Easily! Read it now and enjoy your successful meeting of deadlines!

 

Overcoming Writer's Block

 

Every writer practice own way of writing. Due to this a variety of reasons can cause writer's block. When you are blocked, consider these causes and try the strategies that sound most promising.

 

IF you have attempted to begin a paper without doing any preliminary work such as brainstorming or outlining...

 

THEN relax, open your portfolio with great works done and remember that you are a great writer; use invention strategies suggested by us How to get started by asking the right questions now available: refer to Simple Starting Strategies now available:

 

IF you suddenly don't want to spend time writing or don't understand properly customer’s instructions…

 

THEN resign yourself to the fact that you have to write the paper (remember your responsibility before the Company and the customer, think of bonus for ery satisfied work, remember our fines policy); specify the customer’s instructions via a messaging system (if the paper is not urgent);

·          try some of the strategies listed above;

 

IF You are anxious about writing the paper…

 

THEN read How to Cope with Writing Anxiety

 

IF You're self-conscious about the writing situation, you may have trouble getting started. So, if you're preoccupied with the idea that you have to write about a subject and feel you probably won't express your most original thoughts regarding the subject…

 

THEN talk over the subject with a friend or family member use one of the specific strategies listed below

 

IF You can't stand to write down an idea until it is perfectly worded or if you don't want to leave a poorly worded section on the page after you've written it…

 

THEN ease up on your self-criticism

·          force yourself to write down something, however poorly worded that approximates your thought (you can revise this later) and go on with the next idea

·          use some of the specific strategies below

·          break the task up into steps. Meet the general purpose of the assignment.

 

IF You are worrying about what the customer will think of your paper or how harshly he or she will evaluate it…

 

THEN think of the present draft as a practice run. Write the draft quickly, and revise it later

·          think of previous successfully written papers with us/ remember bonuses got for very satisfied papers;

·          use some of the specific strategies below

 

Begin in the Middle

 

Start writing at whatever point you like. If you want to begin in the middle, fine. Leave the introduction or first section until later. The reader will never know that you wrote the paper "backwards." Besides, some writers routinely save the introduction until later when they have a clearer idea of what the main idea and purpose will be.

 

Talk the Paper

 

"Talk" the paper to someone--your teacher, a friend, a roommate, a tutor in the Writing Lab. Just pick someone who's willing to give you fifteen to thirty minutes to talk about the topic and whose main aim is to help you start writing. Have the person take notes while you talk or tape your conversation. Talking will be helpful because you'll probably be more natural and spontaneous in speech than in writing. Your listener can ask questions and guide you as you speak, and you'll feel more as though you're telling someone about something than completing an assignment.

Tape the Paper

Talk into a tape recorder, imagining your audience sitting in chairs or standing in a group. Then, transcribe the tape-recorded material. You'll at least have some ideas down on paper to work with and move around.

 

Change the Audience

 

Pretend that you're writing to a child, to a close friend, to a parent, to a person who sharply disagrees with you, to someone who's new to the subject and needs to have you explain your paper's topic slowly and clearly. Changing the audience can clarify your purpose. (Who am I writing to when I explain how to change the oil in a car? That guy down the hall who's always asking everyone for help.) Changing the audience can also make you feel more comfortable and help you write more easily.

 

Play a Role

 

Pretend you are someone else writing the paper. For instance, assume you are the president of a strong feminist movement such as NOW and are asked to write about sexist advertising. Or, pretend you are the president of a major oil company asked to defend the high price of oil. Consider being someone in another time period, perhaps Abraham Lincoln, or someone with a different perspective from your own on things--someone living in Hiroshima at the time the bomb was dropped. Pulling yourself out of your usual perspective can help you think more about the subject than writing about the subject.

(Many of these ideas are from Peter Elbow's Writing with Power, [Ch. 8; 59-77] and Mack Skjei's Overcoming Writing Blocks.)

Based on: http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/general/gl_block.html

 

MORE:

 

Even if they manage their time and follow writing guidelines, many writers will still experience a time when the words just won't come together, when they are simply "stuck" and can't think of anything to write. This is writer's block. Fortunately, a few helpful techniques make it possible to overcome the challenge of writer's block.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Experiment -- Try to write in different places, at different times, and with different writing instruments.

 

Freewrite - Choose one sentence in a paragraph and write a paragraph about it. Then choose one sentence from that paragraph and do it again.

 

Cluster - Choose key words and ideas; then write associated ideas and words in clusters around them. This process often forms new ideas.

 

Be flexible -- Be willing to throw out sections of text that are causing problems or just don't work.

 

Follow a routine -- Follow a routine to get into the writing mood. Try activities like wearing comfortable clothing, using a certain pen, or listening to a particular CD or type of music.

 

Move -- Physically move around, stretch, or walk.

Take a break -- Get a snack or drink, talk to someone, or just relax for five minutes before starting to write again.

 

Concentrate -- Focus on a different section or aspect of your paper. This sometimes leads to new insights in problem areas, while allowing you to get work done on another section.

 

Re-read -- Read a print draft of the paper and jot down ideas while reading.

 

Relax! -- The more you worry, the harder it gets to think clearly.

 

( Based on: http://leo.stcloudstate.edu/acadwrite/block.html )