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WillardMorin  20 April 2018 10:42
About Revising: After writing each draft and allowing your ideas to flow freely in a noncritical stream of thought, take a break from your writing, if possible, before coming back to read and revise your draft. Return prepared to call upon the critical, censoring part of your brain to revise and shape your draft into a clear and coherent body of work.

After your main idea and main points have been expressed and elaborated and/or supported with detail, it is important to:

consider all of your information and expressions and choose which, if not all, to keep and which to delete
determine how to most effectively organize or reorganize all the parts into one, strong, well-structured, unified body of writing
focus-in on any further development of the main idea, the main points and supporting information, and the conclusion
To revise means to look again. This is the time to make sure that you are communicating clearly and effectively. Do you want to express something a little differently or delete something unnecessary? Are the main points clearly and logically organized? Keep in mind the purpose of your writing and the needs of your intended readers. Prepare to cut, paste, rearrange, modify, and develop. Do what it takes to structure and organize your work into a clear and coherent body of work.I know that this is so hard to do all these staff yourself, that's why you can buy essay online.


Introduction and Main Idea: Writing experts recommend a strong, attention-catching and effective opening. Examples of beginnings include: background information, questions that will be answered later, interesting anecdotes, quotations, statistics, or simply the main idea. Almost always, a well-stated main idea, (a.k.a. thesis, organizing principle, core or seed idea), is presented in the beginning—in the introductory section of the entire work and before the body. A few exceptions include poetry, mysteries, and works of fiction.

Telling your audience up front what they are about to read, in seed form, is an act of kindness and respect. It provides your readers with a comprehensive mini-view of your work and allows them to knowingly follow along as the main idea unfolds into main points. If you do not provide the main idea at the beginning, your reader may feel lost or confused until you finally do get around to presenting the main idea. Effective writing respects the readers’ time and patience and keeps their attention at every stage.

Overview: Another important part of the introduction, before moving into the body of the work, is to give your reader an overview of what is to come. This provides a sense of how you are going to unfold or develop your main idea, and it provides a link between the parts of the work and the whole of it. This provides the reader with an immediate sense of coherence and unity about the whole work.

Body, Summary, and Conclusion: Here is an old and well known rule of thumb among writers of nonfiction: Tell them what you are going to tell them in the beginning (in seed form), then tell it to them in the middle, and then tell it to them again in the summary.

In the beginning, present the main idea and the overview. You might think of the main idea as the map of the region your readers will travel, and the overview as the general directions you will follow.
About Revising: After writing each draft and allowing your ideas to flow freely in a noncritical stream of thought, take a break from your writing, if possible, before coming back to read and revise your draft. Return prepared to call upon the critical, censoring part of your brain to revise and shape your draft into a clear and coherent body of work.

After your main idea and main points have been expressed and elaborated and/or supported with detail, it is important to:

consider all of your information and expressions and choose which, if not all, to keep and which to delete
determine how to most effectively organize or reorganize all the parts into one, strong, well-structured, unified body of writing
focus-in on any further development of the main idea, the main points and supporting information, and the conclusion
To revise means to look again. This is the time to make sure that you are communicating clearly and effectively. Do you want to express something a little differently or delete something unnecessary? Are the main points clearly and logically organized? Keep in mind the purpose of your writing and the needs of your intended readers. Prepare to cut, paste, rearrange, modify, and develop. Do what it takes to structure and organize your work into a clear and coherent body of work.I know that this is so hard to do all these staff yourself, that's why you can buy essay online.


Introduction and Main Idea: Writing experts recommend a strong, attention-catching and effective opening. Examples of beginnings include: background information, questions that will be answered later, interesting anecdotes, quotations, statistics, or simply the main idea. Almost always, a well-stated main idea, (a.k.a. thesis, organizing principle, core or seed idea), is presented in the beginning—in the introductory section of the entire work and before the body. A few exceptions include poetry, mysteries, and works of fiction.

Telling your audience up front what they are about to read, in seed form, is an act of kindness and respect. It provides your readers with a comprehensive mini-view of your work and allows them to knowingly follow along as the main idea unfolds into main points. If you do not provide the main idea at the beginning, your reader may feel lost or confused until you finally do get around to presenting the main idea. Effective writing respects the readers’ time and patience and keeps their attention at every stage.

Overview: Another important part of the introduction, before moving into the body of the work, is to give your reader an overview of what is to come. This provides a sense of how you are going to unfold or develop your main idea, and it provides a link between the parts of the work and the whole of it. This provides the reader with an immediate sense of coherence and unity about the whole work.

Body, Summary, and Conclusion: Here is an old and well known rule of thumb among writers of nonfiction: Tell them what you are going to tell them in the beginning (in seed form), then tell it to them in the middle, and then tell it to them again in the summary.

In the beginning, present the main idea and the overview. You might think of the main idea as the map of the region your readers will travel, and the overview as the general directions you will follow.
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