Why Writing Matters
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Why Writing Matters in Nursing
Academic writing in the discipline of Nursing provides:
- Personal and professional growth
- Written documentation of knowledge/research
- Evidence of critical thinking
- Expressions of creative ideas
- Discussion of stories from clients
- Active participation in the learning process
- Opportunity to explore nursing literature
- Evidence of understanding of learning activities
Professors in this discipline assign a variety of short and long written assignments.
- Response to case studies
- Exploration and analysis of nursing/health phenomenon
- Reflective writing
- Literature review
- Critique of articles
- Responses to text/questions in class
- Position papers
- Research via thesis or field study
- Data gathering and analysis
- Clarity in understanding and expressing ideas
- Evidence of descriptive and analytical skills
- Construction of solid arguments
- Evidence of critical thinking
- Depth of coverage
- Good organization
- Accuracy
- Grammatical correctness
- Correct spelling
- Intelligent critique
- Completeness
- Creativity and explanation of ideas
- Careful attention to typed (APA*) format and documentation
* Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association, 6th Edition
Appropriate Types of Evidence & Support
- Current nursing texts and journal articles
- Authoritative Web references
- Personal interviews
- Peer reviewed and research-specific articles
Each course may differ; thus it is important to understand the assignment and adhere to specific requirements. Be sure you understand your professor’s expectations.
Format and reference citations should follow APA guidelines unless otherwise directed by the professor.
Within the text of your paper it should be easy for the reader to identify the source of any language or ideas you have used that are not your own; use parenthetical citation (see text, handouts, or web sites). Plagiarism or academic dishonesty could lead to failure of the assignment and/or course.
Communicating with the written word is a skill and takes practice. Keep working on it and utilize the available resources.
- Follow the 4 C’s of writing: be clear, concise, coherent, and correct.
- Be sure you understand the assignment.
- Know that revisions and drafts are part of the process.
- Avoid jargon or slang (unless it is a quote).
- Proofread, aloud or to someone else, and ask for a critique.
- Check spelling and word usage, i.e.: their/there, know/no. Don’t trust spell check to catch all problems.
- Always save a copy, print a hard copy and e-mail it to yourself. “The computer ate it” is not an acceptable excuse.
American Psychological Association. (2010.) Publications manual of the American Psychological Association (6h ed.). Washington, DC: APA.
http://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/01/
http://www.apastyle.org/
http://www.lib.usm.edu/research/guides/apa.html
SVSU Writing Center
See also Writing in Your Major @ www.gvsu.edu/wc
See "Handouts - Writing in Your Major":
- Analysis, Synthesis, & Response Paper
- Application Paper
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