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51 Self-Edit Your Work

Kwantlen Polytechnic University Learning Centres

Proofreading is a part of editing, but editing is much more than proofreading.
By Rawia Inaim in University 101: Study, Strategize and Succeed, which is licensed under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

After you have finished creating a first draft of your paper, you will want to begin the process of editing and revising. Editing is an important part of the writing process that allows you to present your ideas in the clearest and most effective way possible. It involves making improvements to all of a paper—the thesis, how the arguments are organized, paragraph structure, and sentence structure. Proofreading, which involves looking at smaller details like spelling, grammar, punctuation, and word choice, is one step of the editing process, which typically comes after you have edited the content and structure of your paper. A good editing process moves from the “big picture”, step by step, towards the smaller details.

Self-Editing in 5 Steps

Many writers find that it’s difficult to figure out what to revise in their own writing. Following these five steps can help take the mystery out of self-editing.

1) Check the assignment instructions.

  • Compare the instructions to your draft. Use the instructions like a checklist.
  • Make a note of any elements missing from your paper, and focus your revisions on those areas.
  • If you have a grading rubric, “grade” your draft according to the rubric. Note any adjustments that you want to make before submitting the paper.

2) Check the thesis.

  • Is it the right type of thesis for the kind of paper you are writing?
  • Can it be more specific?
  • Does it match the conclusions you draw in the body of the paper?
  • Does it explain the significance of your argument?

3) Check the body paragraphs.

  • Is the topic sentence easy to identify?
  • Is there evidence to support your claims?
  • Is it clear how the evidence supports the claims?
  • Have you explained/discussed the evidence thoroughly?
  • Does the conclusion tie the paragraph’s ideas back to the topic sentence and the thesis?
  • Is there a smooth transition to the next paragraph?

4) Check the introduction and conclusion.

  • Does the introduction introduce the topic and engage the reader?
  • Does the conclusion do more than repeat what you already said?
  • Does the conclusion elaborate on the significance of the thesis?

5) Proofread the paper. Do this several times.

  • Make major revisions first. Do your ideas come across clearly?
  • Then check for grammar mistakes, awkward sentences, repetition, citations, style, and formatting.

Remember that self-editing is a key part of the writing process. It’s also a skill that takes time to develop. The best thing about practicing self-editing is that the process of finding and revising weak areas of our writing gives us a better understanding of our strengths and weaknesses. It also reminds us what a well-developed paper looks like. All of this helps us write stronger papers in the future.

REMEMBER—you can submit your paper to the THINK TANK Writing Center for suggestions for improvement at any time in the writing process.

Try It!

Take out the first draft of any piece of writing you are currently completing.  Follow the five steps listed above. How does following this process help you to edit your work systematically?

License & Attribution

Adapted from University 101: Study, Strategize and Succeed © 2018 by Kwantlen Polytechnic University, which is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted. Any changes made to the original chapter may be found in the Appendix.

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