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Effective Teaching
Strategies:
including reading lesson plans.
Writing
Effectively: A Two-Part Guide to the
Well-Written Text, PART II
by Jan K., The Proofer
In Part 1, I gave you
some ideas on how to write your text. When your text is
finished, you will need to review it in order to spot
the flaws, correct the errors and put a final coat of
polish on your good work. In the publications industry
this process is called “proofreading.”
I’m not going to bother with the minutiae of grammar and
punctuation. Presumably, you faithfully use your
spellchecker program. This will correct misspellings and
point out some basic grammatical flaws. Remember to add
words to the computer’s dictionary that are unique to
your topic so that the spellchecker will continue to
check your article-specific terms for accuracy.
However, spellchecker programs cannot catch
everything---that’s where proofreading comes into play.
In the “best-case scenario,” you will hire a
professional proofreader to perform this service. You
are too close to the work. Inside your brain you know
what you think you’ve written. You will not necessarily
read what you’ve written. An objective pair of eyes can
read your text and spot the errors that your subjective
eyes may have never seen. A proofreader who is also a
good copyeditor will help you sweep away any cobwebs
that might cling to your work by suggesting anything
from minor sentence re-writes to a complete
restructuring of a paragraph.
In the “real-world scenario,” you may not have the
luxury of hiring someone to perform this task. Below are
a few tips and guidelines for how to proofread your own
work, a task that should always be done before you
commit your written word to its final use.
PROOFREADING YOUR OWN WORK
The best tip I can offer is that you never write and
proofread your work on the same day. Your brain has a
powerful short-term memory and you are too likely to
“read what you want to read” rather than read what is
actually there. So, write your masterpiece and then let
it rest overnight. Busy yourself with other tasks, do a
little reading for pleasure, or get out to play a round
of miniature golf. Come back to your text when you are
fresh---not rushed, not tired---and when you are ready
to spend some time on reviewing the words.
Read your work in dis-ordered pieces. When you read your
own text from start to finish, you tend to get a little
cavalier with it, especially toward the end. You are
still so familiar with your work that you know what
comes next, and you may start glossing over text. So
read segments of your work out of order. Read the
middle, then read the introduction, go to the end and
then read the first portion. Just be sure to read it
all. Trust your brain to note any inconsistencies that
might be in the overall work.
As you read, if you find that you have “stumbled” over a
particular sentence---that is, something about the
sentence made you skip or stop---then re-read the
sentence aloud. Put your finger under each word and read
it slowly. You might find that there is a word missing
or that you started one thought but finished another. It
might just need a little bit of re-writing to polish it
up and have it make better sense.
Finally, when you think your work is done, have someone
else read it from scratch, preferably someone who
doesn’t know what you are writing about. This
“objective” reader might find some weak spots that you
didn’t catch. It may be difficult, at first, to accept
criticism of your work, but remember this is how your
readers will see it. So, when objective criticism comes
your way, evaluate it for exactly what it is and see if
there are any changes that should logically be made to
your text.
So now you’ve written a well-ordered and logical text.
You’ve proofread it and you’ve asked for an objective
opinion. You’ve no doubt changed a number of things,
some minor and possibly some major re-writes, and you’ve
improved your own good work. You are now on your way to
mastering the art of writing effectively!
© Copyright 2001 All rights reserved.
Jan K., The Proofer is a
full-time freelance proofreader and copyeditor. In
business since 1995, she has enjoyed working for a
diverse world-wide clientele, covering subject matter
including academic research, medical law, consumer
surveys, and self-help materials. Please visit
http://www.janktheproofer.com
for more information.
For a list of reference books related to proofreading,
copyediting, and the publishing industry, please see my
recommended book list at http://janktheproofer.com/RecommendedBookList.htm
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