Writing
Writing
Writing
Writing, chapter 2 of
Doing Good Things Better
(Ed, Sweden: Irene Publishing, 2011)
available at http://www.bmartin.cc/pubs/11gt/
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Writing
Overview
Most researchers are binge writers: they avoid writing
until deadlines loom.
Becoming a productive writer is more a matter of good
habits and regular work than natural talent.
To develop habits that support productive writing, five
methods are valuable: awareness, valuing, understanding,
endorsement and action.
A writing programme involving brief regular sessions is
compatible with research on expert performance.1
Kerryn
For me, the high-output programme has been a lifeline.
The programme has worked for me as a tool to start
writing my thesis, instead of reading, planning, researching
and just generally delaying the actual process of writing!
Before I adopted the write-before-youre-ready approach
advocated by the programme, the process of actually writing
was a daunting thought. I was always searching for that
elusive block of time when I could sit down and write. That
Writing
time was very hard to find, and as a result my thesis word
count showed only staggered increases.
For me the everyday part of writing new words every
day is crucial. Its about establishing a habit and sticking
to the routine. By adopting this approach, the words are
building steadily. Some days are more productive than
others, but by setting an achievable target in terms of time
(for me its a minimum of 20 minutes) the opportunity to write
each day is possible. Often the momentum gained from just
starting to write results in more time spent writing than
initially planned. I make sure to stop after an hour so I dont
become fatigued and thus not keen to write the next day.
The important thing to remember is that although the
writing may need polishing later, the words and ideas are
there. This keeps your thesis alive. Ive found that after the
initial few weeks taken to establish the habit, writing each
day is a gratifying experience that works to reassure me that
my thesis will be written! Learning the skill of writing new
words has also improved my writing ability - the words come
easier.2
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Boice
The title of Tara Grays book, Publish & Flourish, turns the
familiar publish or perish into a more positive formulation.
Her manual promises success in this vital endeavour.
The foundation of Grays 12-step programme is quite
simple: write for 15 to 30 minutes every day. Yes, thats it: the
core requirement is daily writing and even five days a week
will do.
Gray cites the work of Robert Boice, who back in the 1980s
began studying the habits of productive new academics.5 Boice
is the one who found that daily writing is the key to success.
Why is this surprising? Coaches expect their athletes
swimmers, runners and so forth to train daily. Junior athletes
are expected to show up for training every day, at the same time.
Swimmers have to put in their laps and runners their distance.
This sort of training enables dedicated high school athletes to
achieve times better than world champions a century ago.
So what were top athletes doing a century ago? Those were
the days of amateurs, often from the upper class with spare time
and access to facilities, who trained when they felt like it,
typically on weekends. Very gentlemanly. But their performances werent very good by todays standards.
What about writing? Most academics seem to be operating
like the gentleman athletes of the past. They wait until they feel
like writing. That usually means when they have a big block of
time, or are forced to meet a deadline.
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it does take a while to get back into the topic. And if you write in
binges, you wont feel like doing it again very soon.
Regular sessions provide a solution to these obstacles.
When you get used to writing every day, you dont need as much
start-up time to get into the topic, because you were dealing with
it yesterday. The result is greater efficiency, as memory is
primed and maintained more easily.
As for inspiration, heres the new aphorism: Dont wait to
be inspired to write; instead, write to be inspired. Regular
writing creates inspiration. Boice did an experiment in which
one group of academics did no writing but maintained other
usual activities (reading, seminars, etc.), another group wrote
their normal way bingeing and a third group did brief daily
sessions. The no-writing group averaged one new idea per week,
the binge-writing group two new ideas and the regular-writing
group five new ideas.6 What Boice found is that waiting to be
inspired is not very effective. Writing is the crucible for sparking
ideas, rather than ideas being the trigger for productive writing.
The core of Boices and Grays prescription for productivity is daily writing but not too much. Gray recommends 15 to
30 minutes per day. I have interpreted this as the writing of new
words, rather than revising previous writing.7 If you write for
6 Robert Boice, Contingency management in writing and the appearance of creative ideas: implications for the treatment of writing blocks,
Behaviour Research & Therapy, 21 (1984), pp. 537543.
7 I might have misinterpreted Boice and Grays advice: they might be
happy to include editing in the 15 to 30 minutes per day, whereas I
advise doing editing after writing new words. In my experience, writing
new words is the most challenging task for most researchers, so regularly
doing this is the key to greater productivity. However, there are some
writers who have no trouble producing new words but get stuck in
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paper and into my thesis. My thesis is taking shape steadily
as I paste the ideas into the relevant part of the relevant
chapter.
The most exciting part of this approach to writing has
been reconnecting with the creative side of my brain. The
free writing gives me the opportunity to play with ideas,
rather than slogging away and worrying whether they are
right or expressed perfectly. The support of the group has
also been central to my enjoyment of this approach: the
others inspire and motivate me to stick at it and to work
through the blocks.
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doing too much. For regular writing, you need to feel fresh when
you start. If you feel worn out from too much writing yesterday
or the day before, then you may postpone your session until
tomorrow, starting a cycle of boom and bust, namely binge
writing. So, Boice says, stop sooner rather than later.
Gray in her 12-step programme made the advice more
specific: write for 15 to 30 minutes per day. That means stopping
when you get to 30 minutes. Actually, half an hour is more than
enough for some writers. The optimum time for writing new
words is what you can sustain day after day. It might be 10 or
even just 5 minutes per day.
Again the analogy to exercise is helpful. If you exercise too
much, then you may be sore and need a rest day. The optimum
level is what you can sustain day after day, perhaps gradually
building up the intensity of training but not necessarily the
overall time.
Some athletes train for several hours every day. Think of
the swimmers doing lap after lap. How can writers get by with
only 30 minutes per day?
Suppose you spend 15 minutes daily creating new words.
Theres a lot of additional work required before this becomes
publishable prose: revising, studying key texts, obtaining data,
doing experiments, seeking comments on drafts, submitting the
article, revising it in the light of referees comments and perhaps
resubmitting it if rejected. Writing new words is the core activity, something akin to the highest intensity part of an athletic
training programme, but it has to be supplemented by a lot of
other work. This might require several hours per day.
How many words can you write in a minute? If you just
spew them out without thinking, you can go as fast as you can
type (or, lacking a keyboard, as fast as you can write by hand).
But if you ponder over them, so they come out as text that you
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and probably youll want to read even more books and articles
just to be sure you understand the topic.
This approach can lead to a reluctance to start writing: the
more you know about the topic, the harder it is to measure up to
all this work by prior authors. Matt Groening captured this with
a cartoon about doing a PhD. The caption reads The simple way
to avoid the stomach-churning agony of having to finish your
thesis: read another book repeat when necessary.8
When you write first, before doing all the reading, you find
out exactly what you need to know. In writing an article or
chapter, you find gaps in your argument, points where you need
examples, and places where you need a reference. So when you
turn to the ten books, you dont need to read them in full. Youll
know exactly what youre looking for, so you can just check the
relevant bits.
Does this mean you dont learn as much overall? Not necessarily. When you read a book or article with a purpose, youre
much more likely to be able to remember crucial information
because it fits within a framework youve developed.
Writing as the driver
Given that there are so many tasks involved in research
collecting data, doing experiments, becoming familiar with prior
work, learning theory, etc. why should writing be seen as so
important? The answer, I think, is that writing is a core activity
that drives the rest.
Consider someone who wants to become a better swimmer.
It would be possible to spend a lot of time on things other than
swimming, like making turns, refining the stroke and choosing
8 Matt Groening, School is Hell (New York: Pantheon, 1987), Lesson
19: grad school some people never learn.
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turning off phones and email, closing the door and taking other
steps to block interruptions and distractions.
Boice reports that some people on the writing programme
make great gains in early months. They get into the habit of
writing and it pays dividends. They then decide they dont need
to continue the monitoring parts, such as recording daily minutes
spent writing and words written and reporting them weekly to a
mentor. But when they stop doing this, they have to rely on
willpower much more, and may relapse into bingeing habits.
Boices argument is that you need to continue to shape your
environment to support your good habits.9
Serious athletes expect to spend years in training. If youre
on the high school or university track team, you are expected to
join regular training. Your coach will monitor your performance.
It would be an unusual runner indeed who reached the top ranks
without a strong support system to guide training, give feedback
and maintain commitment.
Why do I keep referring to running and swimming? In part
because they are sports involving individual performance, and so
are a better analogy to the individual task of doing research.
With team sports like soccer, regular training is even more
important. Theres an analogy between team sports and research
groups, though I dont know anyone who has developed the
implications. Its also possible to develop analogies with other
activities requiring practice, such as music and dance.
Brief and regular
Boices approach of brief regular sessions can be used for all
sorts of other activities. When you have a task that youre
avoiding because it seems like you need a block of time to
9 Boice, Professors as Writers, 124.
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accomplish it, try breaking it down into small bits and doing
them day by day.
I had a book to review and never got around to reading it. I
had promised to review it and actually wanted to read it, but it
wasnt high enough on my agenda, so I kept postponing doing
the reading. I even had the book on my list of things to do, but
that wasnt enough. Two years later, after reading Boice, I tried a
different approach: I said to myself, Ill just read five pages
every day. Reading five pages isnt onerous; surely I could do
that. Its only five minutes!
So I read five pages per day. The book had 250 pages, so I
finished in two months. Not quick but definitely faster than
the two years I had delayed getting started. Then I wrote the
review in a day using the writing programme.
Initially I worried that by reading just a few pages each day
Id forget what Id read before. I was surprised: I actually
remembered previous reading quite well: my overall retention
improved. To me it was another demonstration of the advantages
of breaking down tasks and not bingeing.
Boice presents his non-bingeing approach as a general
strategy for good academic performance. The first half of his
book Advice for New Faculty Members is about teaching. Most
new academics, with a full-time teaching load and an expectation to do research, put way too much effort into teaching. They
do this highly inefficiently, by devoting big blocks of time to
tasks with encroaching deadlines.
Preparing a lecture is a prime example: to prepare for a onehour lecture, junior academics not having taught a particular
course before commonly spend many hours in preparation:
reading background material, searching out key ideas, preparing
slides, even writing out every word they are going to say. This
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Recommendations on writing
Only a few people have done proper research about the value of
the writing programme, most notably Boice and Gray. Boice
compared groups of junior academics who adopted his writing
programme with those who didnt and found a dramatic increase
in productivity among those adhering to brief regular sessions
nine times greater output.10 Gray and a colleague found that a
group adopting her programme was producing polished work at
a rate of 75 pages per year, quite good for academics.11
No doubt these controlled tests can be criticised methodologically on the grounds that paying special attention to writing,
and changing habits, could have caused some of the improvements. Even so, they are the best studies available. They carry
far more weight than individual testimonials such as the ones in
this chapter. Nevertheless, its worthwhile looking at recommendations from experienced writing advisers, to see whether
theyre compatible with the Boice-Gray programme.
Brad Johnson and Carol Mullen wrote a book titled Write to
the Top! How to Become a Prolific Academic.12 Johnson and
Mullen are prolific academics themselves. Their book summarises their experience as well as drawing on other studies. They
dont cite Boice or Gray, so its safe to say they developed their
advice independently.
Write to the Top! is a superb systematic treatment of writing
and research, presented in a straightforward way. I say superb
10 Robert Boice, Procrastination, busyness and bingeing, Behaviour
Research & Therapy, 27, 1989, 605611.
11 Tara Gray and Jane Birch, Publish, dont perish: a program to help
scholars flourish, To Improve the Academy, 19, 2001, 268284.
12 W. Brad Johnson and Carol A. Mullen, Write to the Top! How to
Become a Prolific Academic (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007).
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14 Ibid., 40.
15 Ibid., 26.
17 Ibid., 22.
13 Ibid., 45.
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obviously its quite a bit more! Thats much more than the target
set by Gray.
The difference is that King is writing fiction. Its possible
for full-time fiction writers to produce hundreds of thousands of
words several books worth per year. In writing academic
articles and books, theres a lot more work in doing the research.
If you wrote several scholarly books per year, based on your
own original research, you would indeed be extraordinary. In
fact, just one scholarly book per year would make you an
academic star. So Kings recommendations, when translated into
the scholarly realm, are more modest. The key point is that he
recommends a daily target, something to aim at nearly every day
of the year.
Tharp
Twyla Tharp is a highly acclaimed US dancer and choreographer
who has written a book titled The Creative Habit.20 Choreography designing routines for dancers in dance productions is
different from writing, of course, but theres an important
similarity: the need to be creative.
In the creative arts, such as painting and drama, belief in
spontaneous inspiration is even more common than among
academic writers. Tharp challenges this belief, asserting instead
the importance of habit. Indeed, her book is titled The Creative
Habit with the subtitle Learn It and Use It for Life: A Practical
Guide.
She says the key to creativity is discipline, specifically in
maintaining daily habits. She states Creativity is a habit, and the
best creativity is a result of good work habits. In her picture,
20 Twyla Tharp with Mark Reiter, The Creative Habit: Learn It and Use
It for Life. A Practical Guide (New York: Simon & Schuster, 2003).
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21 Ibid., 7.
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Tactics
Lets assume that becoming a productive researcher is a good
thing it wont be for everybody or for every topic, but in
general it seems more worthwhile than being a low-output
researcher whose quality is no better.
What things need to be done to help promote being a
productive researcher? The central goal of the Boice-Gray
approach is to make writing taken to be the core element a
habit. That much is obvious. But how is the habit to be
developed and maintained? Let me spell out the connections
between their approach and five methods for promoting writing:
awareness, valuing, understanding, endorsement and action. As
discussed in chapter 1, these are the same five methods also
relevant for promoting other good things, like happiness and
health.
Awareness In order to turn something into a habit, when it
wasnt a habit before, you need to become aware of it and the
things necessary to promote it. At the beginning of the writing
programme, the key element is setting priorities, for example
putting times for daily writing in your diary. Making something
a priority requires awareness, otherwise it gets downgraded in
importance and postponed.
Boice adds another element of awareness. Just before you
begin to write, he says to pause for a few seconds and think
about what youre doing. This is a form of mindfulness.
Valuing Regular writing needs to be valued, for example by
being associated with other good things, such as good text,
publication and recognition by colleagues.
Some people can obtain validation internally, from simply
telling themselves what they are doing is worthwhile. But for
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