Steve
Buttry, Writing Coach, Omaha World-Herald, has presented
workshops for employers outside journalism who want to help
their workers in such areas as writing reports, newsletters
and memos. The workshop includes this handout. Although it is
designed for a workshop for non-journalists, users could adapt
it as needed for journalists.
Questions? Call Steve at (402)444-1345.
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Polishing Your Writing
Skills
Tips for Writing
Your First Draft
- Write as you research.
Research and writing are part of the same process, and writing as you
go will help the research and the writing.
- If you're having
trouble getting started, write a simple declarative sentence: "This
is a story about the history of Creighton University." Yes, it's boring.
But leave it there. Move beyond the beginning and tell the rest of the
story. Before you're finished, the best beginning probably will become
clear to you. Sometimes the opening is the last thing you'll write.
- Write a simple
outline in advance. Organize your notes the same way you outlined the
story.
- Write as much
as you can without your notes.
- Double-check every
fact. (This doesn't mean check it twice against the same source. See
if you can find two sources to verify each fact). Regard each number,
date, name or title as a potential blow to your credibility. Check even
the things you think you know (unless you're never wrong).
- Read your writing
aloud.
- Help the reader
envision the people and actions about which you write.
- Before you write
each time, identify a weakness in your writing. Address that weakness
in this piece. Make it a strength just this once.
- Keep your audience
in mind. This will determine how much you write, the tone you take,
your organization, virtually everything about the piece.
- Try to keep it
to one page. If you can't, think of a way to summarize your points on
the first page. If you can't summarize the points on the first page,
try to accomplish two things on that first page: reveal what this piece
is about and tell something so interesting or so compelling or so intriguing
that I have to turn the page. Or I won't.
- Don't write one
more word than you need to.
Steps to Follow
in Revising Your Written Work
- Read it aloud.
This may help you find words omitted inadvertently. It will help identify
the long sentences. It will help you discover and refine the voice and
pace of your writing.
- Tighten it. See
if you can shorten each sentence by one word without hurting it. Find
a sentence or phrase on each page that you can eliminate without harm.
- Expand it. Identify
the questions you haven't addressed. Will the reader be asking those
questions? Should you answer them or at least address them?
- Ridicule it. Try
to make fun of your work. Is the tone pretentious? Is the vocabulary
too lofty or too simple? Did a double entendre slip in? Is your writing
redundant?
- Invite criticism.
Ask a friend whose writing you admire to critique it. Perhaps the worst
smart aleck in your office can save you some embarrassment by spotting
the faux pas in advance.
- Leave it alone.
Don't change for the sake of change. If you nailed a point or a passage
on your first try, don't burden it with too much overwriting. Don't
make a single change unless it improves the piece.
- Take a break.
Come back later and read through it with a fresh eye and a clear mind.
- Consider reorganization.
Should some points be grouped together or summarized differently? Try
a whole new approach to the top. If it's better than the one you used,
use it. If it's not, considering it will strengthen your confidence
in the approach you did use. Try a new ending. Is that better than your
first one?
- Consider the tone.
Is it appropriate to your audience. You don't want to insult your readers'
intelligence and you don't want to write over their heads.
- Hunt for jargon
and cliches. Ask whether the jargon is appropriate for your audience.
See if you can replace the cliche with a fresh, original turn of phrase.
- Challenge each
verb. Is it an active verb? Is it the most lively appropriate verb?
Is it the most precise verb?
- Check your grammar
and spelling.
Resources to Aid
Your Writing
- Dictionary. Use
it at least once each time you write, not just to check the spelling,
but to check the definition, so you can learn more precisely the definition
and proper use of the word.
- Thesaurus. Again,
use it at least once each time you write. Use it in tandem with your
dictionary. Use the dictionary to learn the shades of meaning that the
thesaurus doesn't provide. Not every synonym listed is interchangeable.
Check a few synonyms in the dictionary and find the best word for your
purpose.
- Quotation book.
Familiar quotations are often misattributed or misquoted. If you use
a quotation, quote it accurately and attribute it properly.
- Books on writing
style and word usage.
- Specialized dictionaries,
style books and other resources in your field.
- Almanac, for quick
checking of a variety of facts.
- Resources on your
own computer, such as dictionary, thesaurus, spelling checker, grammar
checker. Remember, a desk dictionary or thesaurus might provide more
detailed definitions or more extensive lists of synonyms. Also remember,
a grammar checker is loaded with lots of analytical ability but no common
sense and no sense of style, pace or voice. You provide that. And a
spelling checker won't find a word that's misspelled to match another
word in the dictionary.
- Online writing
resources. Surf the Net a little, looking for helpful sites. A good
place to start is the Nebraska Writing Center, mockingbird.creighton.edu/NCW
- Games. Play Scrabble,
hangman, Wheel of Fortune and other word games, to expand your vocabulary
and stimulate your interest in words.
- Friends, colleagues,
fellow writers. Ask a writer you respect to read your work and tell
you honestly what he or she likes - and doesn't like. Join a writers
group or form one.
Common Grammar and
Word Usage Errors
Who and Whom
A general rule is
to use who as the subject of a verb. Otherwise, use whom. (Same with whoever
and whomever).
Two ways to help you
determine which to use:
- Find the verb
or verbs. If the pronoun does the action of a verb, it's who.
- Rewrite the sentence,
using he or him in place of who or whom, and rephrasing the sentence
appropriately. For instance, "Who do you trust?" may not sound wrong
to you. But "Do you trust he?" certainly does. You can see that it would
be "Do you trust him?" so you know it should be "Whom do you trust?"
Two cases that might
confuse you:
- When a pronoun
is the object of a preposition, the pronoun takes the objective case,
such as whom. But if a dependent clause is the object of the preposition,
who might follow a preposition. For instance: "The pollsters should
give a share of the national championship to whomever finishes the season
undefeated" might seem correct. But remember our basic rule: Is the
pronoun the subject of a verb? The pronoun is the subject of the verb
finishes. So the correct choice is: "The pollsters should give a share
of the national championship to whoever finishes the season undefeated."
- Attribution sometimes
separates the subject from the verb. Ignore it as you seek to decide
whether your pronoun is the subject of the verb: "We should select the
candidate who the search committee said made the strongest impression."
On a quick read, it might appear that the pronoun is the object of select
or said, and thus the pronoun should be whom. But look closer: the pronoun
is the subject of made, separated from its verb by the phrase "the search
committee said." Just remove the attribution from the sentence and it
becomes clear: "We should select the candidate who made the strongest
impression."
One important thing
to consider: In these confusing cases, the correct usage might "sound"
wrong. So consider rewriting the sentence to avoid the confusion: "She
made the strongest impression on the search committee."
Possessive Pronouns
The rule here is simple:
Possessive pronouns don't use apostrophes. His, hers, whose, yours, theirs,
ours, its. If it's a possessive, it's spelled without an apostrophe.
The confusion here
results because some contractions, which do use apostrophes, are spelled
the same as some possessives, except for the apostrophe. Whose and theirs
sometimes end up with incorrect apostrophes, but the worst offender is
its. Take the last sentence in the paragraph above. Spelled out, it would
be: If it is a possessive, it is spelled without an apostrophe. In both
instances, it's is a contraction, so both need apostrophes. To decide
whether you should use the apostrophe, ask whether you can substitute
it is or it has. For instance, "It's really important to write clearly"
is the same as "It is really important to write clearly." But "I have
trouble matching a pronoun with it's antecedent" looks really silly when
you substitute it is or it has. So it should be "I have trouble matching
a pronoun with its antecedent."
Singular-Plural
Agreement
Speaking of pronouns
and antecedents, they should agree. A plural antecedent (that's the word
the pronoun is replacing) requires a plural pronoun. A singular antecedent
requires a singular pronoun. A singular subject requires a singular verb.
A plural subject requires a plural verb. Confusion results when singular
and plural nouns are used interchangeably: "Creighton is having its best
basketball season in years." But "The Bluejays are having their best basketball
season in years."
Two cases that can
be confusing:
- Collective nouns
such as team or committee can take either singular or plural verbs and
pronouns. Generally, these should be treated as singular, requiring
singular pronouns and verbs. The exception should be if the members
of the collective unit aren't acting as a unit: "The couple were fighting
regularly before their divorce." This is again a time when you should
consider rewriting because it doesn't sound right: "Ricky and Lucy were
fighting regularly before their divorce."
- Some compound
subjects might appear plural but actually be singular because the two
elements become a single unit: "Peanut butter and jelly is my son's
favorite kind of sandwich."
Use Active Voice
Just as most of us
find active people more stimulating than passive people, active verbs
produce livelier writing. Examine your verbs and ask whether the subject
is giving or receiving. Is the subject acting, or being acted upon? See
if you can rewrite to make the subject the giver. Compound verbs using
forms of the verb "to be" frequently are passive verbs that can be stronger.
Active verbs also frequently demand more specificity in the subject and
objects, making the whole sentence stronger.
For instance: "I was
given a wonderful Valentine's gift this year" is not as strong or as specific
as, "A White House intern gave me a wonderful Valentine's gift this year."
Either way, the verb is a form of "to give." But the active voice is stronger
and requires a specific subject that the first sentence lacks.
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