Building a new Foundation
Puzzles, games,
woodwork, problem solving, and r/c truck repairs are just my thing. After all,
I’ve always had a knack for fixing things or making them better, and that’s why
I had my heart set on Mechanical Engineering when I arrived at Iowa State.
However, it wasn’t too long ago that I had an interest in journalism and
writing. Having gone through my junior year in high school with consistent A’s
and two teacher requests for copies of my essays in AP Language, I felt that I
would make a great journalist and that it would be a way for me to get closer
to the cars I read about in Motor Trend magazine. With this previous aspiration
and my current goals in mind, I’ve learned a lot about myself as a writer,
including how I was taught to write, what I like to write about, and how I
prepare myself to write various types of essays, articles, and stories. These
facets of my writing not only paint a portrait of who I am as a writer, but
also of who I am as a person and how I express myself through the power of a
pen and paper.
The importance of
learning how to write with a pencil and paper could not have been stressed
enough as I grew up. Before I reached Kindergarten, my dad would have me write
sentences on lined paper for hours each night, pointing out any flaws in the
clarity and neatness of the words I wrote. It’s this stringent
attention-to-detail that I notice the most in my written works today. I find
myself scanning for mistakes multiple times and dwelling over the most senseless
sources of error, such as whether or not the word “rustic” sounds better than
the word “rural” in a sentence. Although this tendency seems like overkill, it
assures me that I will not have points deducted for making a silly grammar
error or mistake in punctuation. However, I feel that I may not have to spend
as much time on those small details in my writing now that I’m in English 250.
With grammar absent from the grading rubrics in this class, I feel that I can now
spend more time working on the breadth and depth of the main subject in my
writing, while focusing less attention to trivial slips in my grammar. This
marks only a minor deviation from how I normally write, but the topics I like
to write about most and the types of writing I most prefer will always remain
the same.
The topics I most
prefer to write about have almost nothing in common with how I was taught to
write. Having grown accustomed to the typical non-fiction book about cars and
the investigative books titled “Nate the Great” and “Sherlock Holmes”, I was
yearning for a way to write about me, who I am, and the personal aspects of my
life. Unfortunately, the opportunity to expound on my life experiences didn’t
come until my junior year in high school, when I decided to write an essay titled
“The Pursuit of Happiness” about my first girlfriend and how my time with her
had a personal impact on me. The fact that this personal essay was the most
enjoyable work I’ve ever written and the fact that it received an excellent
grade indicated that the absence of personal reflection in my life had led me
to prefer more personal essay topics. With this in mind, I enjoy writing about
essay topics that I have an intellectual or emotional connection with. I
believe this holds true for many people, and in contrast to Sonia Sotomayer’s
belief that a natural writer only writes one draft, I believe that every person
is a natural writer when given a topic that they have knowledge on or have an
emotional connection with. Lastly, I’m looking forward to writing essays that
are tailored to my major in English 250. I think it’s good experience for
future writing applications in my field of study and I think I will learn a
great deal more about myself as a writer. In particular, I want to see how I
can expand my preparation for writing essays on different topics, an aspect to
writing that is usually glossed over, but which I have already thought deeply
about.
When I am
preparing to write an essay, I tend to delve into deep thought without any
distractions around me. I close and lock the door to my room, turn off my cell
phone and computer, and shut the shades to fully immerse myself in a state of
focus. This is usually how I begin brainstorming an introduction to my personal
essays, because I believe a strong introduction sets the tone for the entire
essay. For example, making a good first impression with an employer is key to
obtaining a job and being successful in the interview process. This is the same
case with writing. A strong introduction captures the reader’s attention and
describes a brief summary of what the reader can expect see in the body of the
written work. In preparing for a research paper, I typically go for a walk
outside, go to the mall, or take a drive around town looking for ideas and
pondering the issues that face us in the world. In this case, I’ll go home and
look up solutions to the societal problems that I’ve noticed in the world
around me. I’ll then write a strong
introduction that I can base the rest of work on. Overall, starting with a strong
introduction by delving into deep thought and analyzing everyday problems is
how I prepare for writing an essay or narrative. I expect that I’ll be able to
build upon this systematic preparation throughout my spring semester at Iowa
State. By having more places to explore and more people to see, I’ll be able to
develop a broader range of ideas for the essays I write in English 250 and in
my mechanical engineering classes.
Writing plays a major role in my classes as a
mechanical engineering major, and it’s this form of communication that
continues to develop with new terms and lingo as time passes by. With this
constant change in the vocabulary of the English language, it’s important for
me to recognize what areas of my writing are strong, which areas need work.
From how I was taught to write and what I like to right about, to how I prepare
myself for various types of written work, I’ve realized that having a firm
foundation is key to writing good essays. In the past, many English teachers
formed that foundation through numerous rules and set standards for writing,
such as word count. These rules and standards limited my ability to express
myself in my written work, especially in my personal essays. Now that I’m in
college and taking English 250 this semester, I want to rebuild a foundation
for my writing that is based on my strengths in vocabulary, sentence structure,
and inclusion of personal examples, as well as on the expectations for writing
in my mechanical engineering classes. After considering what we discussed in
class about free-writing and suppressing our “inner critic”, I believe this rebuilt
foundation for my writing will help me become more proficient in my major and
help prepare me even more for job placement after college and for all of my
future writing endeavors.
I'm still reading this, Sam, but want to comment on the first part before I get distracted and just end up commenting on the second part of your writing. First, I can see the carefulness in your writing before you mentioned it. It flows. Many times as a reader, I get to a point in someone's writing and it doesn't quite make sense. The ideas bunch up and stick in my head, and it's not until a ways down the page when it all starts to make sense. I'd like that to a stream in the spring: when there's more water than the banks can handle, or the water is cutting a new channel, it sometimes gets all stuck on an obstacle and pools up: the flow is missing. When it builds up far enough, it runs over and flow is restored. I know this pattern because it happens when I write too. It is the natural outcome of writing that is pushing new ideas that haven't yet been smoothed and mellowed by time and re-writing. It's great for first drafts, and it's that that I want to encourage in those writers who have not experienced it before. But we are at different places in our journeys as writers, right? I want to encourage you that even tho I have banished the grammar police, I value the careful consideration between words like "rustic" and "rural" -- because they give the reader different ideas, right? That is a good trait to have, and it is even more fun when you know you have a reader who appreciates the end result of such "nit-picking".
ReplyDeleteIn reading the second part of your writing here, I hear a trend, I think. One, you do have great grasp of your strengths and also what you want to work on. Trust yourself and go with those. I'd also like to clarify that I don't think you are completely rebuilding your writing foundation. Don't discard what you've learned. Most rules are there for a reason, and if you know how to break them, how to lock them out of your head when they try to inhibit you, then they will serve you well as you go back over your writing that last few times for correctness, etc.
You know how working on cars is like science and art? Some of it has precision at its core, some of it is designing the precision in new ways. Some of it is simply art--the expression of the hands that work on it. Writing is like that to me. It sounds like you have the precision part, and that you know you want the art part, but haven't been given many assignments that meld the two. I hope this class can do just that.