[B]logging is in and of itself academic writing and academic publication. It’s not an add-on. It’s now part and parcel of the academic writing landscape. As such, it is of no less value than any other form of writing. Even though audit regimes do not count blogs – yet – this does not lessen their value. And therefore those of us who engage in bloggery need to stop justifying it as a necessary accompaniment to the Real Work of Serious Academic Writing. Blogs are their own worthwhile thing.
Pat Thomson, “Seven reasons why blogging can make you a better academic writer” Times Higher Education 2 January 2016 https://www.timeshighereducation.com/blog/seven-reasons-why-blogging-can-make-you-better-academic-writer (Originally posted 7 December 2015 on https://patthomson.net/2015/12/07/blogging-helps-academic-writing/)
Thomson argues that blogging “informs and supports other academic writing” in the following ways. Blogging:
- Establishes writing as routine;
- Allows you to experiment with your “voice”;
- Helps you focus on one point;
- Helps you find and write to your audience;
- Develops concise writing;
- Allows experimentation with different writing forms; and
- Develops writing confidence.
Blogging is academic writing