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WWII Research Paper. Writing Process. Step 1 – Pre-Writing. Understand the assignment expectations Choose a topic that you are interested in and that meets the assignment expectations Do some preliminary research—not to gather data, but to familiarize yourself with the topic
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WWII Research Paper Writing Process
Step 1 – Pre-Writing • Understand the assignment expectations • Choose a topic that you are interested in and that meets the assignment expectations • Do some preliminary research—not to gather data, but to familiarize yourself with the topic • Understand the research options available to you (books, Internet, etc.) • Start a Source List to keep track of your sources • Use note cards to keep track of the facts, statistics, quotes, etc. that you find while researching • When you think you are finished researching, organize your note cards into paragraphs
Step 2 -Drafting • Familiarize yourself with various introduction techniques for expository writing. Choose one that works for your topic. • Remove the stack of note cards from the first paragraph section of your organizer. • Put the note cards into order according to which facts you will use first, second, etc. • Synthesize those facts into complete, coherent sentences • Repeat for each of the sections on your organizer • Before writing your conclusion, familiarize yourself with appropriate conclusion techniques for research papers • Red over your introduction. Try to tie your conclusion into your introduction (use some of the same keywords, ask or answer some questions, reference something from the intro.
Step 3 - Revision • Revision is making changes to your draft in the areas of organization, ideas, word choices, sentence fluency, or voice. • Revision is best done with the ears. Read the paper out loud to hear if anything sounds awkward or confusing. Mark the confusing or awkward passages. • Have a partner help you find confusing or awkward parts and make suggestions for clarification and improvement. • Move sentences around, change words, add or delete passages—do whatever it takes to improve your writing. • At this point, you may type up your paper and print a copy before the next step, editing.
Step 4 - Editing • Editing is checking for conventions errors—spelling, capitalization, punctuation, format, etc. • Editing is best done with the eyes. • Have a partner carefully read through you paper only for the purpose of finding these conventions errors and marking them for you. • Use spell-check and grammar-check as you type to help you discover errors.
Step 5 - Presentation • Now it is time to get the paper all set up to be turned in as a final copy. • Research papers MUST be typed in proper MLA research format. • Punctuation is especially picky for research papers, so be very precise. Take your time with this step. • You must have a proper heading, title for you paper, in-text citations, and a works cited page.