Checklist
for a Final Edit
There are several common mistakes that appear in
the papers of college students. As we all know, too many mechanical mistakes
can detract from the overall quality of your paper and result in a lower
grade. So before you print up your paper, check through it for the following
things:
When quoting material:
- Periods and commas go inside the quotation marks.
- Question marks, exclamation points, dashes, colons and semicolons are
set outside the quotation marks (unless they are part of the source you
quote).
- When you are using a long quotation, check your system of documentation
(MLA, Turabian, APA,
etc.) for how to define, indent and space long quotations.
- Do not place blocked quotations in quotation marks. The indentation
indicates that you are quoting.
- Make sure you use a consistent method of citing sources, such as footnoting,
endnoting, or MLA parenthetical citations. It
is a good idea to ask your professors what their preferences are.
Checking Usage:
- Check to make sure your nouns and verbs agree
in tense and number.
- Be very careful when using homophones (words that sound alike but mean different
things, like accept/except, effect/affect.) If you are ever unsure if you
are using the right word, check your dictionary or Writer's Web's Commonly
Confused Words.
- Check the paper for colloquial or slang phrases that will take away from
the academic tone of your paper. Also be aware of using gender-neutral language,
and substitute neutral words for masculine ones (for example, humanity for
mankind, etc.)
Checking Organization:
- Make sure you follow your thesis throughout
your paper, and that your thesis is clearly stated in your introduction.
An unclear or incomplete thesis will be the downfall of any paper.
- Check your transitions to make sure that
your paragraphs logically flow from one to the other.
- Check to make sure your paragraphing makes sense. Do not make a new
paragraph because the one you are working on seems too long. Begin a new
paragraph when you begin discussing a new topic, starting with a topic
sentence.
- Finally, try to avoid one-sentence paragraphs. Most paragraphs are
at least three sentences long.
Some final, general hints:
- Always use present tense when discussing a work of art. "In Huckleberry
Finn, Mark Twain employs various local dialects."
- Use past tense when discussing events outside the work of art. "When
Mark Twain wrote Huckleberry Finn, America was rapidly industrializing."
Always read your final draft aloud to catch
errors you overlook when reading silently.
Writer's
Web Topics