What has helped you write better?

By Nathan Young @ 2021-11-12T18:54 (+24)

What content or processes have helped you improve your writing? 

I read Kat Wood's article (below) and it made me wonder what resources people would recommend.

https://forum.effectivealtruism.org/posts/dAbs7w4J4iNm89DjP/why-boring-writing-is-unethical-the-case-for-it-being-high


MichaelA @ 2021-11-14T14:30 (+19)

I previously collected some Readings and notes on how to write/communicate well. I'll copy the whole thing below (as it stands atm, and without the footnotes or comments; see the doc for the complete version).


Preamble

How to use this doc

What this doc focuses on

Some things this doc doesn’t focus on are listed in the following footnote.

Purpose & epistemic status

There are probably literally thousands of existing resources (and collections of resources) covering the topics covered here, and I’ve engaged with a very small fraction of them. So in some ways it feels silly to make my own one. 

But I don’t know of a resource or collection that covers everything I’d want covered. And writing/communication is an important skill, I think I’m pretty good at it, and I very often give feedback on people’s writing. So I thought this doc might be useful for me, for people I give feedback to, and for other people. Also, this doc will itself link to all relevant things that I know of, think are potentially useful, and remembered to add.

Readings and notes

Books on writing

Other resources - misc

Notes - misc

Tips/suggestions I often find myself giving:

Nathan Young @ 2021-11-12T19:29 (+19)

Sending posts to Aaron Gertler and other EAs.

Aaron is very willing to give advice on posts. I've always found it useful.

AllAmericanBreakfast @ 2021-11-13T00:40 (+10)

Writing a lot! Also, analyze what you like about other people’s writing. I also think it’s good to find a substantial source as a point of reference. Try to connect your ideas with established literature, even if that isn’t directly where they sprang from.

Sarah H @ 2021-11-12T19:26 (+10)

Aggressive editing, with an eye to intention, is the single biggest tool I use for improving my own writing. After I write a first draft, I review my draft with an eye for whether different stylistic choices would strengthen my argument. 

First, I consider the flow of my argument. Does it follow a logical structure, where each step is adequately justified? Is supporting evidence provided at the most advantageous moments? 

Then, I consider my stylistic choices on a number of levels: namely, word choice, sentence type, paragraph-level flow, and work-level flow. My goal is to express my argument in the most concise and persuasive way possible, and I review my stylistic aspects to see if they are supporting that goal. For example, I may have a paragraph where every sentence has the same structure (e.g., they're all only one clause). In that case, I would try to vary the sentence structure in order to make the reading experience more engaging. 

Finally, I review the text with an eye to removing extraneous words or sentences. I often begin that process feeling like there's nothing I can remove, but inevitably end up removing a substantial amount of unnecessary words and phrases. The more concise you are, the more persuasive your writing will be. It's that simple.

In terms of resources, I'd recommend Strunk and White's The Elements of Style. It's a classic for a reason. "Elementary Principles of Composition" and "An Approach to Style" are particularly valuable sections of the text.

AllAmericanBreakfast @ 2021-11-13T00:46 (+6)

Write under the assumption that other people will base important life or spending decisions on your output, or offer you jobs or money contingent on the quality of your writing. Not as a source of pressure, but as an honesty check. I find that I apply more rigor and think more clearly when I consider writing for an audience of people who are smarter than me, but don’t have time to produce the document I’m producing for them.

Nathan Young @ 2021-11-12T18:58 (+3)

Twitter. 

Twitter makes me focus on distilling my ideas. Also it's very easy to write stuff so I write a lot more words than on other platforms.