Analyze prewriting activities
The activities associated with prewriting might seem like they have little in common with formal, academic writing. Prewriting is, by its nature, loose and free-flowing. It’s the most open-ended part of the writing process, open to creativity and experimentation. Because of that, some people might see it as silly: a step worth skipping to get to the more “serious” work of real writing.
Avoid that temptation. Prewriting is fun, so take the time to enjoy that part. It allows you to fall in love with your topic, to find a way into the project that seems worthy of exploring in depth.
It is also very productive time. Raw content generated during prewriting can eliminate hours of hard labor further into the writing process. It’s truly an investment that you’ll thank yourself for later on.
This section explores kinds of prewriting activities and the purpose behind each, so that you can select which is appropriate for each new writing task you undertake.
What You’ll Learn to Do
- analyze purpose and defining characteristics of prewriting
- analyze various prewriting strategies
- analyze rhetorical context for the writing task
- analyze the role of a working thesis statement
The Learning Activities for This Outcome Include
- Text: Prewriting Strategies
- Video: Rhetorical Situation
- Text: Working Thesis Statement
- Self Check: Prewriting
- Try It: Prewriting
Candela Citations
- Outcome: Prewriting. Provided by: Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution
- Image of prewriting. Authored by: Kim Louie for Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution