Profwriting

a place for writers and writing

Saturday
Jul 31st
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Professional Reviews One-to-one Mentoring Sample three-month mentoring plan


Sample three-month mentoring plan

After sending in your manuscript or synopsis, you will be allocated a suitable tutor, who will read and assess your submission then work with you over a three-month period to develop your storyline or structure and polish your writing.

First contact

At this meeting (which may be via emails or by phone) you agree with your tutor a plan for the three-month mentoring. Most often, after talking over all the key issues and concerns, writers agree to draft or redraft a certain number of words or chapters – usually at least 15,000 or up to five chapters.

Second contact

At this halfway point, you submit your agreed draft and await feedback from the tutor. This feedback should equip you to redraft and polish your work.

Final contact

By the end of the third month, you should have a final draft ready to show your tutor. He or she will read it carefully and provide a detailed written assessment, which will include pointers to future directions for your writing.

 

Professional Advice

You can have truth or you can have funny.

James Henry, Green Wing, Smack the Pony


Hot Topics

 

Improve your writing

MA Professional Writing at University College Falmouth, in conjunction with HERDA’s Higher Skills Creative Industries Project, is offering a range of one day courses for people who’d like to improve their writing skills for business.

 

Writing in recession: Sophie Parkin

Sophie Parkin tells Phil Williams how the recession of the early 90s prompted her to switch career – and how she started earning a living from writing.

 

Claim your cash

Have you filed a claim with the ALCS? If you've ever had anything published, they may be holding money for you. Click here to find out more.  

 

Robert Goddard

"It is important not to be disheartened."

 

Writing for teens

Meg Rosoff talked about writing for teens at the 2009 London Book Fair. Profwriting student Fiona Egglestone reports back.

Learn to write by the sea

 

Report and Proposal Writing

This hands-on one-day course is designed for busy professionals to help you write better marketing copy. Run by MA Professional Writing at University College Falmouth, in conjunction with HERDA’s Higher Skills Creative Industries Project, the course has been  created with solo practitioners, small and medium business, and business support organisations in mind.

Login