Miisionaier
New member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2026
- Messages
- 16
I wanted to be a better writer, but I wanted it to happen magically, without effort. Then I learned that growth in writing depends on having plenty of time to practice—just like learning a musical instrument or a sport .
The Heinemann blog emphasizes that students should have sustained time to write each week—ideally 3-5 fifty-minute periods with time for instruction, practice, and sharing . That's a lot! But it makes sense. You can't get better at something you're not doing.
How I built practice into my routine:
I started blocking out two-hour writing sessions instead of squeezing in 20 minutes here and there. The difference was huge. I had time to get into flow, work through problems, and actually enjoy the process. Practice is essential because writing is a skill, not a talent.
The Heinemann blog emphasizes that students should have sustained time to write each week—ideally 3-5 fifty-minute periods with time for instruction, practice, and sharing . That's a lot! But it makes sense. You can't get better at something you're not doing.
How I built practice into my routine:
- Daily freewriting, even just 10 minutes
- Keeping a journal (not for grades, just for me)
- Revising old papers even after they're submitted
- Writing for different audiences and purposes
- Experimenting with styles and genres
I started blocking out two-hour writing sessions instead of squeezing in 20 minutes here and there. The difference was huge. I had time to get into flow, work through problems, and actually enjoy the process. Practice is essential because writing is a skill, not a talent.