Examples of drafting in the following topics:
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- Your university can provide several resources to help you through the process of planning and drafting an academic paper.
- Writing in drafts makes academic work more manageable.
- Drafting gets your ideas onto paper, which gives you more to work with than the perfectionist's daunting blank screen.
- Saturday: Look again at the draft and continue to make changes/additions/deletions.
- Sunday: Write a final draft.
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- Even if you are not officially at the drafting stage of your paper, that's okay.
- It can be tempting to get bogged down in the research process and avoid moving on to actually writing a first draft.
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- After you choose your topic and assemble your research, organize your ideas before you start drafting.
- An outline is a great way to troubleshoot and firm up your argument before you commit to it in a draft.
- You can (and probably will) change the structure of your argument when you draft your paper, and perhaps again when you revise.
- Leave enough time after creating your outline to get at least a night’s sleep before writing your first draft.
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- In high school, students usually submit their work in multiple stages—from the thesis statement to the outline to a draft of the paper, and finally, after receiving feedback on each preliminary piece, a completed project.
- You might wonder how to approach the drafting phase without feeling overwhelmed, or you might be curious about the brainstorming methods we recommend.
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- The drafting phase creates a coherent path for the reader to follow from thesis to conclusion.
- The first draft is the time to focus on doing that.
- Writing drafts makes the work more manageable.
- With that in mind, here are some ways to maximize the benefits of drafting:
- Allow time between drafts: One of the great benefits of writing a series of drafts is that it allows your brain to sift through the information layer by layer.
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- Drafting and revising is a dialogue between the inner artist and the inner critic.
- In the prewriting stage, we ask the inner critic to take a nice long nap all the way through the first drafting phase, but now we awaken it and put it to work.
- Revision begins after you've finished your first draft and is repeated as often as necessary from that stage forward.
- It's useful, though, to take at least a day and a night away from the draft, rather than jumping into revising immediately.
- If not, though, recognize that you're repeating the steps you used in drafting.
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- Because your entire argument must relate to it, it is important that you know what your thesis is before you start drafting your paper.
- Since all thesis statements need to relay the same pieces of information, you can start drafting yours by following the formula: "I am working on the issue of _____ in order to prove that _____.
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- The advice given above on class discussions also applies when you and your peers are given time in class (or in a group study session, in the writing center, etc.) to workshop drafts of each other's papers.
- Give the author two positive comments, and three suggestions for improvement in the next draft.
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- As you draft your introduction, you should seek to answer the following questions: Why did you take the time and effort to conduct this experiment?