Finish the exercise by reflecting in your journal for five


Exercise - Reading Creatively, Reading Critically

Now that you've seen how the double-entry journal can help you analyze an image, let's try it with a more familiar kind of text. I published the essay "The Importance of Writing Badly" some years ago, but I think it still expresses several of the main ideas behind this book. I'd like you to read the piece critically, though, using the double-entry journal method I just described.

As before, you'll use opposing pages of your journal.

STEP ONE: Read the essay once through, marking it up. (Make a copy if you don't want to write in your book.) Read it a second time and, on the left-hand page of your notebook, carefully copy lines or passages from the essay that

  • Connected with your own experience and observations
  • Raised questions for you
  • Puzzled you
  • Seemed to be key points
  • Evoked disagreement or agreement or made you think differently
  • Were surprising or unexpected

STEP TWO: Now use the right-hand page of your notebook to think further about what you wrote down on the left-hand page. Use the questions in Figure 2.3 as prompts for a focused fastwrite. Write for five or six minutes without stopping.

STEP THREE: Reread what you've written. Again, on the right-hand page of your notebok, write your half of the following imaginary dialogue with someone who b Asking you about the idea of tad writing."

Q: I don't understand how bad writing can help anyone write better. Can you explain it to me?

Q: Okay, but is it an idea that makes sense to you?

Q: What exactly (i.e.. quotation) does Ballenger say that makes you feel that way?

STEP FOUR: Finish the exercise by reflecting in your journal for five minutes on what, if anything, you noticed about using the double-entry journal to have a "conversation" with a text. In particular:

  • How did it change the way you usually read an article such as this one?
  • How might you adapt it for other situations in which you have to read to write?
  • What worked well? What didn't?
  • Do you think the method encouraged you to think more deeply about what you read?

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