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WRITING
AND REVISING
Writing Tips
- What
do you want to say? Think before you write. Outline
ideas or your argument before starting.
- Who
is your reader? Even if you are writing for an expert in
the field, imagine that you are explaining your ideas to an intelligent
stranger. Make your sentences specific, clear, concise.
- Avoid
process comments, such as “I will now discuss x, then critique
y, and summarize, closing with z.” Scientific writing, where
the emphasis is on logical argument and results, often uses an
impersonal third-person approach. First-person recounting
can be distracting, at best.
- Use
simple words, cut out jargon, and trim excess wherever possible.
In other words,
Omit
needless words. Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence
should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary
sentences, for the same reason that a drawing should have no unnecessary
lines and a machine no unnecessary parts. This requires
not that the writer make all sentences short, or avoid all detail
and treat subjects only in outline, but that every word tell.
(Strunk & White, 2000, p. 23)
- Use
strong verbs in the active voice; by translating the passive into
active, your writing will be livelier.
Wrong: The investigation
was conducted by researchers who found that…
Right: Researchers investigated
…and found that….
Grammatical Guidelines
- Your
subject and verb should agree in person and in number.
Wrong: The subjects
each has his or her own identification code..
Right: The participants
each have their own identification code.
- Parallel
construction of words, phrases and clauses will improve the flow
of your writing and heighten clarity, thus enhance reader comprehension.
Wrong: …government
of, by and for the people
Right: …government of the
people, by the people and for the people
- Use
parallel construction not only in sentences but in lists, outlines,
or headings, in order to provide impact and to simplify your writing.
- Use
commas, colons, semicolons, and dashes to vary your sentence structure,
but know which is appropriate when. Consult a good
style book, as well as a dictionary and thesaurus.
Revising Checklist
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Give
yourself 24 hours to get some distance from your writing before
revising. |
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Read
it aloud, to yourself or a colleague. If it doesn’t make sense
to you, or the other person, it certainly won’t make sense to
your reader. The sentences or paragraphs that are hard to read
or comprehend are those to rewrite, perhaps even rethink what
you mean to say. |
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If
a sentence sounds awkward, even though it makes sense to you,
rewrite it. Don’t make your reader suffer through clumsy prose
to find your ideas, as in:
In
a broader sense, one might view much of the history of
psychology in terms of the tension generated by these
two seemingly contradictory components of the human organism,
a history that has involved an oscillation between periods
in which the field has focused primarily on motivational
issues and periods in which it has focused principally
on cognitive issues.
[The
same sentence revised:]
The
history of psychology reflects a tension between these two
components. It has oscillated between a focus on motivation
and a focus on cognition. (Clark, 1988, p. 1)
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Outline
what you have written, if you didn’t start with an outline,
paragraph by paragraph, idea by idea. |
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Be
on the lookout for new ideas that can arise from your revisions. |
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Edit
for bias. Avoid stereotypes and labels, or find substitutes
for words that could be seen as insensitive, such as ethnic
references or masculine pronouns. |
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Run
Spell Check! It often catches typographical and grammatical
errors. But remember, Spell Check misses homophones,
words that sound alike (e.g., ‘affect’ or to influence, and
‘effect’ meaning a result or to bring about, to accomplish).
Therefore, before you hand your paper in… |
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Proofread
once again. A good tip is to read the paper one line at a time,
covering the remainder with a sheet of paper so you can focus.
Otherwise you can schedule an appointment with a Writing
Center tutor to help with this stage |
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