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Academic Writing - 2nd Years
Academic Writing - 2nd Years
Year 2
Elaine McCarthy
Outline
Essay
Part One
Lectures
750 words (25%)
Part Two
Elective
2,000 words (75%)
Due 16th of December
Learning Outcomes
Important to consider the Learning Outcomes as
these are the grading criteria your lecturers will use
to correct your work.
Research
Analysis
Communication
Need to demonstrate that you have come to
the class and engaged with the ideas
presented.
Essay Question
Key words
Understand directive words
Glossary
www2.le.ac.uk/offices/ld/resources/writing/writingresources/essay-terms
Active Research
Reading
SQ3R -
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0dhcSP_Myjg
Plan
Break it down !
Introduction 200 words
Point 1 400 words
Point 2 400 words
Point 3 400 words
Point 4 400 words
Conclusion 200 words
Total 2,000 words
Remember this is an example.
Adjust your plan to fit in all your key points.
Essay Construction
Your conclusion is the roof of
your argument. It seals your
essay.
The body contains the main
themes. Like the rooms of a
house, they are connected but
each has a different purpose.
The introduction is the first
layer
References form the foundation
Paragraph Structure
Each paragraph
Introduce
Backup with
evidence
Summarise
Write
Get started!
Follow your structure
Refer back to the research question
Workspace: consistent, comfortable &
organised
Refine and reassess later
Academic
Writing
Being Critical
Put forward a question or argument
Explore and evaluate
Examine
limitations/shortcomings/weaknesses
Reference experts
Make a constructive suggestion
Remember be respectful, this is not about
slating another persons work/ideas/methods
Struggling? Have a chat with classmates
about your topic. You will soon find you have
an opinion or stance to take.
Key Phrases:
Introduction
The objective of this essay is
The essay will focus on.
This essay will aim to answer
the question
This essay will attempt to
examine
This essay will explore
Conclusion
In conclusion,
All things considered
Rule: Never bring in new
information unless making a
point about future directions in
the discussed topic
Academic Phrasebook
www.phrasebank.manchester.ac.uk
Remember
Use UK spelling rather than US spelling e.g.
colour rather than color
Use font size 12
Double space your writing
Dont over rely on quotes
Reference
NCAD Referencing
System
Harvard Style
Why Reference?
Plagiarism
MARK AIRS/ISTOCKPHOTO.COM
Need to cite and reference all information that is not your intellectual
property. This includes paraphrased information, i.e. information you
have put in your own words.
Trustworthy
Source?
Credible
NCAD Online
Journals
capitadiscovery.co.uk/ncad/
NIVAL
www.nival.ie
Google Scholar
scholar.google.com
Things to note
The authors
name
The year it was
published
The title
Who published it
Where it was
published
Pages you used
Quote
It takes a great deal of time and
thought to install work carefully. This
should not always be thrown away.Most
art is fragile and some should be placed
and never moved again (Judd, 1987, p.
35).
Paraphrasing
Judd placed a great importance on the
curation of work, remarking that this
process should take a large amount of
time and thought to be done correctly
(1987, p. 35).
Artwork
Include only when referred to in the text.
Piet Mondrians work Broadway Boogie Woogie (1942143) (Fig. 2)
Bibliography
List ALL material consulted
Placed at the end of your essay
List it alphabetically by
authors name
Citation software Zotero
www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8SfO4N2OMc
Bibliography - Book
Author (or editor), (year of
publication in parenthesis),
Title in Italics. Place of
publication: publisher.
Poyner, R. (1998) Design without Boundaries.
London: Booth-Clibborn Editions.
Bibliography
Chapter with Different
Authors
Bibliography
Web Resource
Author/ editors name, (year in
parenthesis), Title in Italics. Place of
Publication: Publisher (if
ascertainable). Available from: URL
(Accessed: date)
Holland, M. (2004) Guide to Citing Internet Sources.
Poole: Bournemouth University. Available at:
http://www.bournemouth.ac.uk.library/using/guide_t
o_citing_internet_sources.html (Accessed: 4
November 2004)
Bibliography
Journal Article
Author, (year of publication), title of
article, title of journal in italics,
volume number (part number), page
numbers of article.
Dawes, J. and Rowley, J. (1998) 'Enhancing
the customer experience: contributions
from information technology',
Management Decision, 36(5), pp. 350-357
Bibliography
Film
Title of film (Year of Distribution)
Director [Material designation].
Place of distribution: Distribution
Company.
Macbeth (1948) Directed by Orson
Welles [Film]. USA: Republic Pictures
Some Exceptions
No page number (just leave it out!)
Anonymous work - use title of work
(Treasures of Art, 1990, p.84)
No author or year (website) - use title as
author and n.d. for year
If no main author (video or film) use the title
Exact year unknown (ca. 1750) or (n. d.)
More than one publication - use letters to
distinguish and list chronologically in
bibliography (Smith, 1988a, p.1)
Common Writing
Mistakes
Did not specify essay question at
start
No clear introduction
Poor structure
Overly descriptive
Written in the first person I, my
Misuse or absence of punctuation
Poor referencing
Fuchsia Macaree
Time Management
Organise: notes, workspace, emails
The Organised Student
theorganisedstudent.tumblr.com/printables
Prioritise with to do lists
Timetabling
Colour code
Stay Focused
Pomodoro Principle
25 mins of work and 5 mins break (x3)
20 min break
Timers - Tomato Timer - tomato-timer.com
Limit Distractions - Cold Turkey getcoldturkey.com
S.M.A.R.T. Goals
Example
Specific Begin introduction
Measurable I will write 200 words
Attainable I can manage 200 words
Relevant Working towards deadline
Time-orientated Tonight 6-9pm
Stress Management
Stress and the brain
http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-stress-affects-your-brainmadhumita-murgia
Exercise
Social Support
Meditation: Mindfulness
Questions?
Need Help?