Step 12: Have Someone Else Proofread
Reprint your paper, making all those corrections
you marked during
the last step. Format the paper according to the teacher’s instructions.
Incorporate your final footnotes and bibliography.
Give your paper a title, one that’s as short and sweet as possible but
tells readers what they can expect to learn from your paper.
Find someone who is a good proofreader—a parent,
relative, friend—
and ask him or her to proofread your paper before you put together
the final draft.
Steps 13–15: The Final Draft
Incorporate any changes or errors your proofreader may have caught.
Print the final draft. Proof it again—very carefully.
Here are a couple of tricks of the trade: 1)
Read your paper aloud.
Go ahead—shout it from the rooftops! It’s amazing how easily you’ll
discover misplaced words, poor grammar, even a misspelling or two.
2)
Read your paper backwards. This
forces you to focus on each
individual word and is a sensational way to pick up misspellings.
Last step? Put your paper in a new manuscript binder or folder. Then,
turn it in—on time, of course!
Oral Reports
There are some key differences between writing a report and pre-
senting it orally, especially if you don’t
want to make the mistake of
just reading your report in front of the class.
Chapter 7
■
How to Write Terrific Papers
167
If you’ve been assigned to give a talk for a class,
it will probably fall
into one of the following categories:
■
Dostları ilə paylaş: