The Evergreen State College Guide to Writing Your Academic Statements

Page 50

Drafting Techniques There are no requirements for the formal structure of an Academic Statement, so the ways to approach the drafting of your Academic Statement are also limitless. However, sometimes having no confines can make it hard to know where to start. Here we have two possible options—the narrative draft and the self-interview approach—that may provide you somewhere to begin drafting. There are benefits and drawbacks to each process. Do whatever works best for you! Narrative: Annual Academic Statement OR Final Academic Statement A narrative draft is text that is all related to tell a story or illustrate a point. It probably has a beginning, middle, and an end or a major takeaway, truth, or lesson. Pros: When you go through the process of writing a narrative draft every year, you develop a form and voice that evolves with you as you grow and reflect. The process of writing out a full narrative annual draft of your Academic Statement each year allows you to gain skills in reflective writing through a low-stakes document before you have to write a high-stakes final draft for your transcript. Developing reflective writing skills in narrative form also makes an easier transition from annual to final draft and provides you a foundation for what your Final Academic Statement will look like. Cons: Practicing and refining this form of narrative reflective writing can be rewarding, but many students find the narrative draft an intimidating challenge. If you’re in the early stages of writing or your education feels nebulous, it can be difficult to synthesize reflections into a cohesive form. Not only that, but you may be leaving out important details that won’t fit neatly into one cohesive narrative but should be explored. If the narrative draft does not feel like a functional approach for you, you may want to try our self-interview approach. Self-Interview: Annual Academic Statement or FIrst Draft of Final Academic Statement There’s no real reason that an Annual Academic Statement can’t be based on a series of prompting questions. You can simply respond to a series of open-ended questions to generate an Academic Statement draft. Pros: The value of completing the Annual Academic Statement is in the reflective process, not in the looks or end product. By thoughtfully answering open ended questions about your education and goals, you practice reflective writing in smaller, accessible chunks. Additionally, it may be easier to compare your growth and challenges if you’re answering these same questions every year in your Annual Academic Statement. These can later serve as notes when you begin to draft your Final. Also, if you do a self-interview draft, you can always rewrite your answers into a narrative form. Cons: It’s hard to know where to begin and end with the questions. In order to really capture the nuance and complexity of your experience, you might be asking and answering a lot of them. Also, it may not feel like a smooth transition into writing your Final Academic Statement in narrative form if you have gotten used to writing a selfinterview in your Annual.

48 | The Evergreen State College | Writing Center


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Colophon

1min
pages 68-70

Academic and Evergreen-Specific Nomenclature

5min
pages 66-67

Formatting and Punctuation

2min
page 65

Style Guide

1min
page 64

Resources

2min
page 58

Proofreading

2min
pages 56-57

Editing

2min
pages 54-55

Revision Techniques

3min
pages 52-53

Drafting Techniques

4min
pages 50-51

Brainstorming Techniques

1min
pages 48-49

Applying the Five-Stage Writing Process to Academic Statements

2min
pages 46-47

The Five Stage Writing Process: An Overview

1min
page 44

When to Write: When and how long should I work on my Academic Statement?

5min
pages 42-43

The Benefits of Working in the Order of the Stages

1min
page 45

The Process of Writing Your Academic Statement

1min
page 40

Including Personal Information in Your Academic Statement

3min
pages 38-39

Topic Sentences, Summary, and Analysis

4min
pages 36-37

Classic Essay Styles

1min
page 34

Common Custom Essay Styles

2min
page 35

Knowledge, Skills, and Abilities

2min
pages 30-31

Essay Styles to Browse

1min
pages 32-33

How Others See a Liberal Arts Education

4min
pages 28-29

Your Liberal Arts Education

1min
page 27

The Meaning You’ve Made out of Your Education

1min
pages 24-25

What to Talk About

3min
pages 22-23

Circle of Genres

1min
pages 20-21

Getting Inspired: Materials for any Stage

1min
page 19

Reflective Writing at Evergreen Timeline

1min
pages 14-15

Why Write Academic Statements?

2min
page 16

Final Academic Statements in Context of Your Transcript

2min
pages 10-11

What are Academic Statements at Evergreen?

1min
pages 8-9

Common Questions about Academic Statements

6min
pages 17-18

The Transcript as an Institutional Document

3min
pages 12-13

Foreword

3min
pages 4-5

How to use this guide

1min
pages 6-7
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