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Fall 2020 Authors
Tag Archives: Habitual writing
Blog post #10
In “all writers have something more to learn” one of the biggest things i took from reading this passage was that sometimes we don’t learn the best from trial and error but sometimes better to get very good direction for … Continue reading
Blog Post #5
The main point of the article “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment” by Chris M. Anson is that writing can become dry if there is no exposure. When writers get used to the same rhetorical situations they become comfortable and … Continue reading
Blog Post #5
In the article “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Enrichment” by Chris M. Anson describes when individuals constantly practice the same activity it becomes automatic. Writers that consistently learn to use a specific structure, format, and processes to create an essay … Continue reading
Blog Post 5
The article “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment” by Chris Anson, this whole article is about how even writing to a certain audience can turn into a habit. The idea that anything you repeatedly do, you will have stuck in … Continue reading
Blog Post #5
The article “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Enrichment” by Chris M. Anson shares how writers can become entrenched or solidified in their work. When writers focus repeatedly on similar topic, genres, or settings they become “solidified”. Because of this, when … Continue reading
The Importance of Learning to Adapt Your Writing
In the article “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment,” Chris M. Anson discusses that when writers constantly write within the same format, and to the same audience, this can cause issues when they have to produce other types of writing. … Continue reading
Tagged Chris M. Anson, Habitual writing, Personal Response, summary
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Learning New Things Can Improve Your Writing by Ryan Schaecher
In “Habituated Practice Can Lead To Entrenchment” by Chris M. Anson from the book Naming What We Know, he talks about the idea of repetitive writing and how the ways in which you do your work can become automatic. When … Continue reading
Tagged entrenchment, failure in writing, Habitual writing, learning
Comments Off on Learning New Things Can Improve Your Writing by Ryan Schaecher