Limitation of the Problem
gift rather than skill.
4
So, we can say that even great writers with an amazing writing skill had spent their time through practice because practice makes perfect.
Moreover, he also states another definition that explains writing is a process of discovery.
5
The writer has gone through a long way to produce a good writing, and sometimes it involves a series of steps. In other words, to have a flawless
writing we have to organize our idea, put it on a paper, and then revise it. They are all the processes of writing which writer has to follow.
On the other hand, Raimes states that writing is a part of communication and it also helps students to learn. She explains it in three reasons: First, writing
can foster students’ understanding about grammatical structures, vocabulary and idiom that teacher have been taught. Second, students have a chance to explore
their language knowledge while they are writing, and they are brave enough to make a mistake. Third, students will engage in a new language when they write,
and they use their eye, hand, and brain to express the idea in learning process.
6
It can be concluded that writing gives some benefits in linguistic competence for
students who explore their writing through practice. Moreover, Flynn and Stainthrop argue that
“Writing is such a complex activity that it makes considerable demands upon our limited processing
capacity ”.
7
In order to form a good, logic and meaningful sentences, a writer has to work out their feels and senses. Perhaps, it might not be easy for everyone to do
so. Another writing definition from Sale, he defines that “Writing considered as a
mechanical skill”.
8
What he means by mechanical is performance of a process which involves a series of sets, repeatable steps that can be listed so it turns easier
to understand. Anyone who does those activities will have an instinct that in doing a job in this case is writing without have much effort. In other word, if someone
4
John Langan, English Skills, New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001, p. 10.
5
Ibid., p. 12.
6
Ann Raimes, Techinques in Teaching Writing, New York: Oxford University Press, 1983, p. 3.
7
Naomi Fylnn and Rhone Stainthroph, The Learning and Teaching of Reading and Writing, West Sussex: Whurr Publishers, 2006, p. 63.
8
Roger Sale, On Writing, Toronto: Random House Book, 1970, p. 15.