So, what exactly do we mean by prewriting? Well, there's a lot that has to happen before experienced writers actually begin the drafting process, and much of that falls into the category of prewriting. Prewriting is the planning and organizing that a writer does before actively beginning to write. It features several distinct phases or purposes, each of which will have to be tailored to a particular writing project.
Prewriting includes:
It's important to do this kind of prewriting, because the organizing and clarifying of thoughts and plans that it provides gives writers greater control over their projects and usually saves them time in the long run.
One of the most important benefits a writer can get from prewriting is a narrow, manageable focus. It's important for the goals of a writing project to be realistic.
It's important to keep a focus narrow because doing so makes it possible to fully explain the ideas and fully answer the questions that drive an essay. There's nothing worse than a writing project that can't take into account the relevant details involved in its claim, or one that can't support the broad argument it's trying to make.
When planning an essay during the prewriting step of the writing process, a writer should consider his or her audience and purpose, then ask whether the focus of the argument is tight enough that he or she will be able to do it justice in the time and space allowed. This will help the writer narrow in on a working thesis -- one that can be used as the basis of the outline and, eventually, of the essay itself.
Once you've got your focus narrow enough to be manageable, the next thing to do is create an outline for your essay. Outlines vary depending on the writer and the writing project at hand. Generally speaking, outlines are the prewritten plans, for an essay or other piece of writing, that generally include at least a working thesis and the primary ideas to be discussed, as well as some form of structural plan or organization. Metaphorically speaking, an outline is the blueprint, not the house!
Outlining makes for a stronger piece of writing, as well as a faster, more focused writing process. There are multiple kinds of outlines, just as there are multiple ways of making them. In this lesson, we will cover three different forms that an outline can take.
3a. Traditional
The first type is a traditional outline, which is highly detailed and includes headings and subheadings. Suppose you are writing an argument about health insurance and your thesis is that universal health care is better than trusting for-profit companies to make the right decisions about their patients. You might make an outline that plans out the three main headings you'd need to cover:
3b. Less Defined
Another form of outline, one a little less rigid and detail oriented, might work something like this. You might simply write out your thesis, stating that universal health care should be implemented in America, then quickly note down any reasons and presumed evidence. Again, this may include the problems you see in for-profit companies working in the industry, how much better other countries seem to be at taking care of themselves, and reasons why Americans don't seem predisposed toward universal health care.
3c. Storyboard
A third, perhaps less common form of outlining, is called storyboarding. This involves drawing a series of panels or squares with notes and images detailing a writing plan. For our working thesis on universal health care, you could break up your outline into three pieces or panels: the first about companies, the second about alternatives, and a third about why we don't institute universal health care.
As you can tell, each of these three methods of outlining would contain more or less the same information and be equally useful in writing the essay. Here, as in many other aspects of the writing process, it all comes down to personal preference.
Source: Adapted from Sophia Instructor Gavin McCall