I was wondering if people make outlines for their's and how effective are they?
4/29/2007 10:29:56 PM
For the love of Ambrose, write outlines. It makes your paper 10x's better, and it's easier in the long run."If you fail to plan, you're planning to fail."
4/29/2007 10:37:20 PM
presentI have an outline for this 10-pager: it just helps organize my thoughts better than diving in unassisted.
4/29/2007 10:42:19 PM
sigh present...12-15 page paper for my grad class (nearly done!) due tuesresults/discussion/finishing intro and methods for my honors project wordsYES outlines[Edited on April 29, 2007 at 10:58 PM. Reason : also]
4/29/2007 10:58:45 PM
Already finished my 14 page history paper and my 30 page finance paper. Yay for anti-procrastinators.P.S. Never used and outline, psssh.
4/29/2007 11:02:38 PM
when i was in 1st grade everyone thought it was funny to say "president" instead of "present" during roll call.
4/29/2007 11:06:59 PM
I am writing a semi outline, but I usually don't use them.
4/29/2007 11:31:30 PM
Why wouldn't you? They only take like an hour, and save you multiple hours and make your paper substantially better.
4/29/2007 11:34:52 PM
How do you guys manage to write 10+ papers on anything? Is there actually that much to talk about or is the majority of it bs and all the other standard tricks for artificially increasing the length of a paper?In all my life I've never had to write anything longer than five pages. Which is good for me, because I'm terrible at bs-ing.
4/29/2007 11:40:56 PM
thesis?
4/29/2007 11:43:15 PM
4/29/2007 11:43:35 PM
Writing long papers isn't that hard, provided you have something to say. Generally, if you've done a good job of collecting material, you will have plenty to say. For me, it helps that I'm wordy in general.Of course, I say this knowing that the longest paper I've ever written was 35 or so pages for my management capstone course, and about 10 pages of that were graphs.
4/29/2007 11:49:34 PM
4/29/2007 11:51:03 PM
WOW...I did not know there are people that do not write multiple 10+ page research papers in college.The one that i am writing at the moment has to do with Katsushika Oi [daughter of Katsushika Hokusai] and the suppression of women in life and in the arts during the Edo Period. I will have trouble keeping it under 10 pages.[Edited on April 30, 2007 at 12:20 AM. Reason : ...]
4/30/2007 12:14:21 AM
4/30/2007 12:23:05 AM
got a ten pager in spanish i gotta do. i decided to go with an outline this time around and it turned into a really lengthy one of about 6 pages. now i just gotta translate it and turn it into a paper.
4/30/2007 1:21:07 AM
I haven't written an outline in the past 10 years
4/30/2007 1:32:54 AM
I never really write an outline. My key to writing is to start two days ahead and give myself time to correct a rough draft.Good writing takes good editing. I can usually tell if a paper is bullshit or not before I turn it in. So, I don't normally get surprised when they give me the grades.
4/30/2007 1:37:35 AM
working on a min, 5 pager... 3 year strategic plan for public fire education/fire prevention plan... shouldn't be that bad... due at midnight.... and yeah on this one i'm using an outline... it depends on if I use an outline, if it's a paper that's mostly opinion or whatnot then no I don't use one. If the requirements have a list of items that are required to be in the paper then I do use an outline, makes it easier.
4/30/2007 8:19:50 AM
signed 8-10 pager due tomorrow, started on it last night after work.....
4/30/2007 9:16:43 AM
barely if ever used an outline. Always slowed me down.
4/30/2007 9:46:07 AM
I generally will outline a paper in my head while driving or something and generally don't take the time to actually write the outline out.I agree with umbrellaman, it's not a 35 page paper if 10 pages are full of graphs and its double spaced etc. Hell I've had some 80 page reports but if you were to take out the appendices(sp?) and pictures etc it'd only be 10-15.
4/30/2007 9:47:32 AM
are those take home papers?
4/30/2007 12:13:22 PM
I have 72 hours to write 5 papers.way to go me for being a dumbass!
4/30/2007 12:24:09 PM
Outlines, as much of a pain in the ass to do sometimes, will more than pay for themselves. Even on a short 3-5 pager, I'll at least jot down the main topics and a few subheads to work off of.I had a really half-assed outline when I wrote me thesis that ended up biting me in the ass. Never again. I'm finishing up a book right now that started with a rough outline, then expanded things as found more info. Best decision I ever made.And for god's sake, you're got to edit. The first or second draft of anything always sucks, but at it at least gives you something to polish. If you can find a few folks to read and comment on your stuff, you're also miles ahead.If you end up having to use a fair amount of references, get yourself a copy of EndNote. You can grab your references straight from the library's database without having to manually type it in, and if you tag things properly, it will automatically create both the bibliography and in-text references while your write. That one stupid program would have save literally days of work on the thesis by keeping track of everything and doing the formatting. IMO, this kind of stuff should be taught as a mandatory class for any writing-intensive major, and ANY master's program. I'm going back a re-taking some of the sessions they give at the library about bibliographic software before I dive back into school this fall.So yeah, do the outline
4/30/2007 1:24:02 PM
gahhhhhhhhhhhhh paper...
5/2/2007 1:53:29 AM
Me too!
5/2/2007 2:23:49 AM
yeah those suggestions work great if you're trying to pass the seventh grade writing test
5/2/2007 6:20:51 AM
5/2/2007 7:02:04 AM
question from punchmonk - any strategies for paring down a paper that has gone way over the #pages requirement?[Edited on May 2, 2007 at 2:25 PM. Reason : . ]
5/2/2007 2:13:08 PM
i get back to writing my masters project proposal as soon as finals are over. outlines are a MUST. it makes sure you cover all the bases, because once you start writing, you tend to lose track of things. and a good advisor who guts your work every time you hand it to her also helps.
5/2/2007 5:07:28 PM
^^ bump for qntmfred's question to be answered.
5/2/2007 6:29:08 PM
5/2/2007 11:16:32 PM
had one due on monday. ended up being 23 pages, holla. (ok ok... 15 pages of graphs, charts, and maps, and only 8 of writing. but seriously, the graphs and stuff took longer to make because of the huge amounts of stuff i had to include!!!!)
5/3/2007 1:13:55 AM
use refworks from the library, you can export references and it will do your in text citations/footnotes in the style you want, and it will generate your references page. it makes keeping track of and organizing references so much easier.
5/3/2007 8:36:10 AM
I'm waiting for either refworks or endnote to play pretty with something other than MSword or openoffice. I do damn near all of my drafts on Google docs now, and I'd love to be able to toss in the references as I go a bit easier. Refworks and Endnote are the absolute shit though. Well worth the hour it takes to learn how to use if you do any academic writing at all.
5/3/2007 9:58:06 AM
i usually make a outline, as means to procrastinate actually starting to write...
5/3/2007 2:03:02 PM
how about a "YAY! I'm done with papers for the semester!" roll call..
5/3/2007 5:10:30 PM
$*%*(#@*%(#@@ results tables take forever...
5/4/2007 12:58:45 AM
Real men don't write outlines.
5/4/2007 1:30:33 AM
DONE
5/4/2007 3:32:08 PM
I always took my notes on index cards.After I was done writing my outline, I'd organize all my index cards on the floor according to each main idea and sub-topics of my paper.Then as I was writing I'd have all the appropriate ideas/notes/quotes right in front of me for each paragraph I'd want to write. Seriously everyone, get your stuff organized. It's 10x's easier and results in a product that's 10x's better.
5/4/2007 3:38:00 PM
5/4/2007 4:03:48 PM
Wheeeeeeeeeeeee!
5/4/2007 8:33:49 PM