Freewriting


Freewriting is a technique that helps you clear mental space so that thoughts about an issue in question can emerge that had been below the surface of your attention—insights that you were not able, at first, to acknowledge. (Supportive Listening is another means to that end.) Elbow (1981) presents freewriting on the creative side of the necessary interplay of the creative and the critical in thinking and writing. You may wish to make freewriting a start-of-the-day habit to warm up your research and writing.

In a freewriting exercise, you should not take your pen off the paper. Keep writing even if you find yourself stating over and over again, "I don't know what to say." What you write will not be seen by anyone else, so do not go back to tidy up sentences, grammar, spelling. You will probably diverge from the topic, at least for a time, while you acknowledge other preoccupations. That is OK—indeed, it is one of the purposes of the exercise. However, if you keep writing for seven to ten minutes, you should expose some thoughts about the topic that had been below the surface of your attention—that is another of the aims of the exercise.

In a guided freewriting exercise, you continue from where a sentence provided by the instructor leaves off (examples follow).

At the start of a project

Early on in a project

When you begin to draft a report

Reference

Elbow, P. (1981). Writing with Power. New York: Oxford University Press.