Chapter 4 The Writing Process: Stage Three Writing/Revising/Editing
Writing the First Draft
In
 Stage Three of the writing process, your work begins to assume tis 
final form. Use your outline, or alternative form of organization, as a 
guide in composing your paragraph or essay. For college work, your 
controlling idea should almost always be clearly stated early in the 
paper. The Toman-numeral parts of the outline will provide the framework
 for the main ideas of a paragraph assignment or for the topic sentence 
ideas in an essay. Supporting information-details, examples, 
quotations-is likely to be used in approximately the same order as it 
appears in the outline. Keep in mind that you should not be bound 
absolutely by the outline. Outline often need to be redone just as your 
initial writing needs to be redone.
Most
 writers do best when they go straight through their first draft without
 stopping to polish sentences or fix small problems. Try that approach. 
Using the information in your outline and ideas as they occur to you, go
 ahead and simply write a paragraph or an essay. Do not be slowed down 
by possible misspelled worlds, flawed punctuation, or ungraceful 
sentences. You can repair those problems later.
Whether
 you write in longhand or on a computer depends on what works best for 
you. Some writers prefer to do a first draft by hand, mark it up, and 
then go to the computer. Computers save you time in all aspects of your 
writing, especially revision.
Revising
The term first draft
 suggests quite accurately that there will be other drafts, or versions,
 of your writing. Only in the most dire situations, such as an in-class 
examination when you have time for only one draft, should you be 
satisfied with a single effort.
What you do beyond the first draft is revision and editing. Revision includes checking for organization, content, and language effectiveness. Editing
 (discussed later in this chapter) involves a final correcting of simple
 mistakes and fundamentals such as spelling, punctuation, and 
capitalization. In practice, editing and revising are not always 
separate activities, although writers usually wair untill the 
next-to-the-last draft to edit some minor details and attend to other 
small points that can be easily overlooked.
Successful
 revision almost always involves intense, systematic rewriting. You 
should learn to look for certain aspects of skillful writing as you 
enrich and repair your first draft. To help you recall these aspects so 
that you can keep them in mind and examine your material in a 
comprehensive fashion,  this is offers a memory device-an acronym in 
which each letter suggests an important features of good writing 
quickly. Soon you will be able to recall and refer to them 
automatically. These features need not be attended to individually when 
you revise your writing, although they may be, and they need not be 
attended to in the order presented here. The acronym is CLUESS 
(pronounced "clues"), which provides this guide: Coherence, Language, Unity, Emphasis, Support, and Sentences.
Coherence
Conherence
 is the orderly relationship of ideas, each leading smoothly and 
logically to the next. You must weave your ideas together so skillfully 
that the reader can easily see how one idea connects to another and to 
the central thought. This central thought, of course, is expresed in the
 topic sentence for a paragraph and in the thesis for an essay. You can 
achieve coherence efficiently by useing the following:
- Overall pattern
 - Transitional terms
 - Repetition of key words and important ideas
 - Pronouns
 - Consistent point of view
 
Overall pattern
Three
 basic patterns prevail: time (chronology), space (spatial arrangement),
 and emphasis (strss on ideas). Sometimes you will combine patterns. The
 coherence of each can be strengthened by using transitional words such 
as the following:
For a time pattern: first, then, soon, later, following, after, at that point
For a space pattern: up, down, right, left, beyond, behind, above, below
For an emphasis pattern: first, second, third, most, more
Transitional Terms
By using transitional terms you can help reader move easily from one idea to another.
Repetition of Key Words and Important Ideas
Reapeat
 key words and phrases to keep the main subject in the reader's mind and
 to maintain the continuity necessart for a smooth flow of logical 
thought. 
Pronouns
Pronouns,
 such as he, her, them, and it, provide natural connecting links in your
 writing. Why? Every pronoun refers to an earlier noun (called the antecedent of the pronoun) and thus carries the reader back to that earlier thought.
Consistent Point of View
Point of view shows the writer's relationship to the material, the subject, and it susally does not change within a passage.
Language
In
 the revision process, the word language takes on a special meaning, 
referring to usage, tone, and diction. If you are writing with a 
computer, consider using the thesaurus feature, but keep in mind that no
 two words share precisely the same meaning.
Usage
Usage is the kind of general style of language we use. All or almost all of us operate on the principle of apropriateness. 
Usage
 is animportant part of writing and revising. Judage what is appropriate
 for your audience and your purpose. What kind of language is expected? 
What kind of language is best suited for accomplishing your purpose?
Tone
Thone
 means that the sound of speaker's voice and maybe the language choices 
conveyed disrespect to the listener. The tone could have represented any
 number of feelings about the subject matter and the audience. Tone can 
have as many variations as you can have feelings: it can, for example, 
be sarcastic, humorous, serious, 
cautionary, objective, groveling, angry, bitter, sentimental, 
enthusiastic, somber, outraged, or living.
Diction
Diction
 is word choice. If you use good diction, you are finding the best words
 or a particular purpose in addressing a certain audience. There is some
 overlap, therefore, between usage and diction. 
Unity
A
 controlling idea, stated or implied, establishes unity in every piece 
of good writing. It is the certral point around which the supporting 
material revolves. For a paragraph, the elements are the topic sentence 
and the supporting sentences.
Do
 not confuse unity and coherence. Whereas coherence involves the clear 
movement of thought from sentence to sentence or paragraph to paragraph,
 unity means staying on the topic. A unified and coherent outline would 
become incoherent if the parts were scrambled, but the outline 
trchnically would still be unified. These qualities of writing go 
together. You should stay on the topic and make clear connections.
Emphasis 
Emphasis,
 a feature of most good writing, helps the reader focus on the main 
ideas by stressing what is important. It can be achieved in several ways
 buy mainly through placement of key ideas and through repetition.
Placement of ideas
The
 most emphatic part of any passage, whether a sentence or a book, is the
 last part, because we usually remember most easily what we read last. 
The second most emphatic part of a passage is the beginning, because our
 mind is relatively uncluttered when we read it. For these reasons, 
among others, the topic sentence or thesis is usually at the beginning 
of a piece, and it is often restated at the end in an echoing statement.
Repetition of Key Word and Important Ideas
Repetition
 is one of the devices in your writer's toolbox. The words repeated may 
be single words, phrases, slightly altered sentences, or synonyms. 
Repetition keeps the dominant subject in the reader's mind and maintains
 the continuity necessary for a smooth flow of logical thought.
Support
A
 good developmental paragraph fulfills its function by developing the 
topic sentence. An essay is complete when it fulfills its function of 
developing a thesis. Obviously, you will have to judge what is complete.
 With some subjects, you will need little supporting and explanatory 
material. With some subjects, you will need little supporting and 
explanatory material. With others. you will need much more. 
Incompleteing enough support, be sure that the points of support are 
presented in the best possible squence.
Sentences
In
 the revision process, the word sentences refers to the variety of 
sentence patterns and the correctness of sentence structure.
Variety of Sentences
A
 passage what offers a variety of simple and complicated sentences 
satisfies the reader, just as various simple and complicated foods go 
together in a good meal. The writer can introduce variety by including 
both short and long sentences, by using different sentence patterns, and
 by beginning sentences in different ways.
Length
In
 revising, examine your writing to make sure that sentences vary in 
length. A series of short sentences is likely to make the flow seem 
choppy and the thoughts disconnected. However, single short sentences 
often work very well. Because they are uncluttered with supporting 
points and qualifications, they are often direct and forceful. Consider 
using short sentences to emphasize points and to introduce ideas. Use 
longer sentences to provide details or show how ideas are related.
Variety of Sentence Patterns
Good
 writing includes a variety of sentence patterns. Although there is no 
limit to the number of sentences you can write, you may be pleased to 
discover that the conventional English sentence appears in only four 
basic patterns.
Each
 of the four sentence patterns listed has its own purposes and 
strengths. The simple sentence conveys a single idea. The compound 
sentence shows, by its structure, that who somewhat equal ideas are 
connected. The complex sentence shows that one idea is less important 
than another; that is, it is dependent on, or subordinate to, the idea 
in the main clause. the compound-complex sentence has the scope of  
the compound sentence and the complex sentence.
Variety of Sentence Beginnings
Another
 way to provide sentence variety is to use different kinds of 
beginnings. A new beginning may or may not be accompanied by a changed 
sentence pattern. Among the most common beginnings, other than starting 
with the subject of the main clause, are those using a prepositional 
phrase, a dependent clause, or a conjunctive adverb such as therefore, 
however, or infact.
Problems with Sentences
A
 complete sentence must generally include an independent clause, which 
is a group of words that contains a subject and a verb and can stand 
alone. Some groups of words may sound interesting, but they are not 
really sentences. Three common problem groupings are the fragment, the comma splice, and the run-on.
Editing
Editing,
 the final stage of the writing process, involves a careful examination 
of your work. Look for problems with capitalization, omissions, 
punctuation, and spelling (COPS)
Because
 you can find spelling errors in writing by others more easily than you 
can in your own, a computerized spell checker is quite useful. However, 
it will not detect wrong words that are correctly spelled, so you should
 always proofread. It is often helpful to leave the piece for a few 
hours or a day and then reread it as if it were someone else's work.
Source:Brandon,
 Lee. Brandon, Kelly. Paragraphs and Essays with Integrated Readings, eleventh Edition. Boston, NY: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2011
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