Writing
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Boundless Writing
The Research Process
Using Your Sources
Writing Textbooks Boundless Writing The Research Process Using Your Sources
Writing Textbooks Boundless Writing The Research Process
Writing Textbooks Boundless Writing
Writing Textbooks
Writing
Concept Version 20
Created by Boundless

Writing While You Research

Once you have enough notes, you should start writing, even if you intend to keep researching.

Learning Objective

  • Explain the use of beginning to write your paper during the research process


Key Points

    • As you research, let yourself do some preliminary writing. Provide yourself with a space to think through ideas and consider how your ideas are related to each other. This can be a very helpful practice as you move into the writing phase.
    • Writing as you read is a way to avoid getting bogged down in researching, which can feel endless as you try to determine what is and is not a relevant source. By causing you to think through your research materials, preliminary writing is a good way to build the specifics of your argument.
    • Take notes as you read your sources, since relying on memory will lead to losing information. Similarly, start coming up with the organizational structure and argument of your paper as you gather research.

Terms

  • drafting

    The preliminary stage of a writing project in which the author begins to develop a more cohesive product.

  • note

    A mark, or sign, made to call attention to something.

  • idea

    The conception of someone or something as representing a perfect example; an ideal.


Full Text

We often think of the writing process as a series of discrete steps. We first research, then take notes, then outline, then write. However, in practice, the different phases of writing a paper often overlap. As you research, you begin taking notes. As you take notes, you begin to see how you want to put your argument together and may even start developing an in-depth analysis of some of your sources. Even if you are not officially at the drafting stage of your paper, that's okay. The research you do will often provide you with insights that you'll want to include in your argument.

If you have an idea for your essay while taking notes, don't wait to write it down—start developing it! While the idea is still fresh and clear, take a break from research and start working on your paper's structure or argument. Writing about issues you discover in your research that you find interesting will take the tedium out of researching and outlining and will help you better understand the format your essay will take.

Once you have enough notes, you should start writing, even if you intend to keep researching. It can be tempting to get bogged down in the research process and avoid moving on to actually writing a first draft. Avoid this impulse by starting to write while still researching. At this early stage, it will still be easy to include new research as you find it.

You may only be able to write one section at a time, or you may start writing a section and realize that you need more support from your sources. Beginning to construct your paper during the research process helps you identify holes in your argument, weaknesses in your evidence or support, and may reveal a need to change the structure or format of your essay. It is often easier to address these issues in an ongoing manner than it is to wait until the end of either the research or writing process. 

Active research

Don't just read passively—take notes throughout the research process.

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