In my experience, people rarely think of themselves as writers, but they frequently think of themselves as bad writers. Adopting that sort of critical stance towards our own writing could be beneficial if it was part of a broader project of developing our writing skills. But novice writers often treat bad writer as an ontological category, as a condition that will afflict them forever and always. Needless to say, it can be hard to improve your writing if you are more or less resigned to never improving. If you are inclined to think of yourself as a bad writer, try lopping off the ‘bad’. Doing so may leave you with a more hopeful construction: ‘I am a writer who needs to improve in such-and-such ways. These improvements will come from such-and-such strategies.’
I recently came across an interesting article that discusses a range of strategies designed to improve the writing process:
 One strategy is to confront and talk about rather than ignore the difficult emotions that writing stirs up.
The second strategy is to explicitly address procedural know-how and expose what goes on in the writing process.
the third strategy is to…hail novices as academic writers

