The writer uses the chronological method of organization to present events or ideas in the order in which they occurred or should be carried out.
The process of giving credit for ideas which are not the writer's own ideas is called attribution or citation.
Writer is a noun and has no tense. Write is a present tense verb (writes for the third person singular conjugation).
A writer is like a guide, leading the reader through a cluster of ideas. An outline is like a map showing the best path. Some writers start with an outline -- just a list of the ideas the writer wants to present -- arranged in the order the writer thinks will be most effective. Other writers start with paragraphs, just explaining the ideas in whatever order they come, and then rearrange them in the most effective order. Then they write the outline, to see if one paragraph leads smoothly to the next, or if they've left something out. Either way, the outline helps the writer to organize ideas for the reader.
A writer would not use the present tense when describing something which happened some time previously.
The writer uses examples, statistics, expert opinions, and anecdotes to support the ideas in the essay. These forms of evidence help strengthen the argument and provide credibility to the writer's claims.
Brainstorming
usually a writer
You need to be a writer and have an agent
When a writer writes from their own perspective, they are able to offer their own ideas about a topic.
If you're going to be a writer you need to learn how to come up with your own ideas -- being a writer means having ideas popping into your head all the time. Here's a link to help you learn how to find ideas.
To write observations, feelings, and inspiration