Writing Exercises

Your writing group may want to spend some of its meeting time actually writing. Writing your responses to different kinds of writing prompts and exercises can provide your group with material to discuss in your meetings, even when no one has brought a draft for the group to read. Using writing exercises can also help you develop an effective writing process and practice various components of your writing process in a relatively stress-free and productive way. Comparing your responses can help you get to know the other group members better and learn from one another in a constructive setting. Below are several writing exercises that your group might try. You could spend anywhere from five minutes to an hour on these exercises, depending on your interest and the directions your conversations take.

Writing About Your Group

By writing about the writing group, the way it is working, and the policies that you have established, your group can get to know one another's preferences better, resolve potential problems, and learn to work together more effectively.

Writing About Your Writing Process

Ever writer is different and so, too, is every writer's writing process. Writing about and talking about your processes with one another can help you think about your own process more concretely and learn from each other's strategies.

Writing About a Specific Piece of Writing

Instead of writing text that will become a part of a paper, it is sometimes helpful to write about the paper itself. Doing so can help you find trouble spots, solidify some of your ideas, and figure out a useful organization before you start writing the paper.

Creative Writing

Writing doesn't have to be focused to be helpful. Your group may want to experiment with creative writing as a way of accustoming yourselves to the regular habit of writing. For some, creative writing can be less stress-inducing than writing that must follow rigorous academic conventions or writing that will be graded. Try these starters:

 

 

 

 

The Writing Center
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
http://www.unc.edu/depts/wcweb