Parts
The main idea starts in the center; concepts such as sub-ideas, views, support for or against, or major conflicts stem off of it. Other concepts may branch off of these throughout the process of mapping out ideas. There are many types of charts one can use; spider mapping is common and simple to use, with little planning required. Aside from the main point, the sub-stems hold the important ideas, people, and views, conflicts to the main character or idea. They may include many sub-characters, minor characters, play comic relief, supporting roles, weaker conflict, or thought-provoking roles.Planning
A spider map is aBenefits
Normally, one draws the chart out. Getting ideas on paper is the starting point; when the ideas are put down on paper, they are out of the writer's head, giving one the opportunity to think of how characters or ideas link together, what the conflict is, or what plot twists could make the story or idea more successful.See also
* Mind mapReferences
* {{Cite journal , last=All , first=Anita , last2=Huycke , first2=Larae I. , last3=Fisher , first3=Mark J. , date=November 1, 2003 , title=Instructional Tools for Nursing Education: CONCEPT MAPS , journal=Nursing Education Perspectives , volume=24 , issue=6 Problem solving methods Diagrams