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6.7: Brainstorming and Freewriting

  • Page ID
    58324
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    Learning Objectives
    • Explain how brainstorming and freewriting can help you start writing

    As you begin thinking about a topic, before you begin your official draft, you’ll want to write down ideas and concepts associated with your assignment to develop your ideas. This is a critical step in helping to shape and organize your paper. Brainstorming and freewriting are two great ways to get started.

    Brainstorming

    Brainstorming allows you to quickly generate a large number of ideas. You can brainstorm with others or you can brainstorm by yourself, which sometimes turns into freewriting. To effectively brainstorm, write down whatever ideas come to mind.

    Brainstorming

    To brainstorm, let your thoughts about a specific topic flow, and list those thoughts.

    Example: squirrels

    • How to get them out of the garden
    • How to get rid of them ethically (without killing)
    • Squirrel traps
    • Repellents for squirrels
    • Types of squirrels
    • Brown vs. black vs. red squirrels
    • Flying squirrels
    • What they eat
    • Different types of play
    • Training squirrels
    • Hunting squirrels
    • Squirrels and cats
    • How they nest
    • Build nests in the same place each year

    So, what happens once you’ve brainstormed a topic? Look over the list. Are there items that group together? Are there items that catch your interest as a thinker, researcher, and writer—items you want to know more about? Are there items that seem unrelated or not useful? Use your list as a starting place; it creates ideas for you, as a writer, to work with.

    Sometimes it works better to write down each idea on a separate piece of paper. It also helps to ask yourself some questions:

    1. What do I care about or what am I interested in?
    2. What do I know that I could teach others?
    3. What irritates or annoys me about this issue?

    In order to capture more of your thoughts, you may want to brainstorm a few times until you have enough ideas to start writing.

    Brainstorming Assignment Example

    Imagine you are in a class. Your instructor says you will have to write a paper on your favorite freetime activity, and that you must also persuade your reader to try it.

    1. First ask yourself, What do I care about? or What am I interested in? It is easiest to write about a topic that you are interested in. This could be anything from gardening to ice skating, or from writing poetry to playing the piano. Your list, in this example, would then read:
      1. gardening
      2. ice skating
      3. writing poetry
      4. playing the piano
    2. Second, ask yourself, What do I know that I could teach others?
      1. You may be able to teach someone else something that you really enjoy. Good for you. If you cannot, don’t worry; you are still just brainstorming. Perhaps you teach swimming lessons or t-ball, or maybe you bake really well and are able to offer some of your insights. Your list, in this example, would then read:
        1. swimming lessons
        2. t-ball
        3. baking

    Let’s think of another example. How about the common situation in which the instructor wants you to write about “something you care about” or an “issue you have”?

    1. Again start by asking yourself a question. Ask yourself, What irritates me? Everyone has things that irritate them, some small and others large.
      1. An example of something small that’s irritating could be people in your dorm who leave trails of toothpaste by the sink and never clean up after themselves. A personal example can be useful as a bridge to a larger issue that will be your topic—in this case it could be community living and personal responsibility.
      2. In academic writing with a less personal slant, the source of irritation is often another writer/theorist with whom you disagree. Your “irritation” then would lead to an effective piece about why you have a better conception of what’s really going on.
      3. A less direct version of this would be a writer/theorist who makes some good points but lacks something in his/her argument that you can add to the “conversation.”
    Watch It

    This video demonstrates that writers of all levels and experiences value the process of brainstorming. This clip shows how writers brainstorm ideas for the show, Bernie Mac, which aired in the early 2000s.

    A link to an interactive elements can be found at the bottom of this page.

    Freewriting

    Freewriting is just what it says—writing freely, whatever comes into your mind, without caring about spelling, punctuation, etc. It’s a way to free up your thoughts, help you know where your interests lie, and get your fingers moving on the keyboard (and this physical act can be a way to get your thoughts flowing).

    Try a series of timed freewritings. Set a timer for five minutes. The object is to keep your fingers moving constantly and write down whatever thoughts come into your head during that time. If you can’t think of anything to say, keep writing I don’t know or this is silly until your thoughts move on. Stop when the timer rings. Shake out your hands, wait awhile, and then do more timed freewriting. After you have a set of five or so freewritings, review them to see if you’ve come back to certain topics, or whether you recorded some ideas that might be the basis for a piece of writing.

    Freewriting Example

    Here’s a sample freewrite that could yield a number of topics for writing:

    I don’t think this is useful or helpful in any way. This is stupid, stupid, stupid. I’m looking out of my window and it’s the end of may and I can see that white cotton stuff flying around in the air, from the trees. One of my aunts was always allergic to that stuff when it started flying around in the spring. Don’t know offhand what type of tree that comes from. That aunt is now 94 years old and is in a nursing home for a while after she had a bad episode. She seems to have one now every spring. It’s like that old tree cotton triggers something in her body. Allergies. Spring. Trying to get the flowers to grow but one of the neighbors who is also in his 90s keeps feeding the squirrels and they come and dig up everyone’s flowerbed to store their peanuts. Plant the flowers and within thirty minutes there’s a peanut there. Wonder if anyone has grown peanut bushes yet?

    Don’t know . . . know . . .

    Possible topics from this freewrite:

    • Allergy causes
    • Allergies on the rise in the U.S.
    • Consequences of humanizing wild animals
    • Squirrel behavior patterns and feeding habits
    • Growing your own food

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