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ARTICLE
Proofreading
Without Spoofs! (A Few Useful Tips)
Proofreading is a pain. There's no doubt
about it. It can be tedious and boring--if you approach
it as correcting errors. But proofreading isn't correcting
errors so much as it involves reviewing the paper for
ideas and for readability. It allows you to read your
draft, to consider what you've written, and to change
your mind. It's an opportunity to clarify--for yourself
as well as for your reader--what you've said and to
make some choices. Proofreading is in your control,
no one else's. No one, really, can proofread for you
because the kinds of changes that come form proofreading
are changes in your meaning, your intent, and your purpose
in the draft. But while no one can proofread for you,
others, a classmate, or a writing assistant at the Writing
Resource Center, can help you proofread; they can help
you assess the draft, propose some alternative solutions,
and make some choices. So, while proofreading can be
tedious, it doesn't have to be lonely.
This handout covers two different kinds of proofreading:
Proofreading for revising or rewriting, this involves
major reworking of the paper: rearranging the order
of paragraphs, cutting material, adding new paragraphs
and sections, and so on.
Proofreading for editing, this involves working primarily
with sentences: rephrasing them, clarifying them, and
correcting grammatical and mechanical mistakes.
Each kind of proofreading involves different strategies.
Many writers, however, have developed only one technique
to cover both revising and editing.
This handout doesn't address "true revision"
- which involves a global re-thinking of the purposes
and intents of the draft. Instead, the strategies offered
here are designed to help you review a paper that is
beyond the invention stage.
The first set of strategies address proofreading for
Revising: How to review a draft for the presentation
of ideas. Use this section to help you work with a paper
that is still in draft that needs work with the ideas.
Keep in mind that at this stage there are no hard and
fast "rules" to appeal to. Instead, you need
to be flexible. Use this section to help you review
a draft with an eye to focusing, organizing, and developing
it.
The second set of strategies address proofreading for
Editing: how to review a near-final version of your
paper to ensure that you have provided cues for the
reader to help him or her read the text easily. This
section deals with things such as clarity in sentences,
as well as addressing some common sentence errors people
make. We don't present the "rules" of grammar
here; instead, we present some strategies for finding
and fixing some common sentence problems. Use this section
to help you review a near-final version of a paper with
an eye to polishing it.
General
Strategies for All Proofreading
Allow yourself some time between writing and proofreading.
You need the time so that you can get some distance
from what you have written and return to it with a fresh
mind and eye.
Keep in mind that you're writing for people who are
not present and often not very willing to put a lot
of effort into making sense of the paper. You can't
expect them to get inside your head and understand what
you mean to say; you can't expect them to guess at what
you might mean; and you can't expect them to fill in
gaps or connect ideas you haven't explicitly connected
yourself. You have to make sure you say all you need
to say so that your readers can understand you without
having to work too hard at it. Many teacher-readers
value clarity and explicitness. They value being able
to get to the ideas in the paper without being hindered
by sentence-level errors; and they value writing that
makes connections between ideas and presents the implications
of those ideas.
Don't try to proofread for everything at once. Make
a number of passes through the paper. First, make a
number of passes to proofread for revising. Then, after
you've made any changes you need, make another set of
passes to proofread for editing, watching for a different
problem or concern each time.
Keep in mind that in proofreading for editing, you're
not trying to change every sentence that you've written.
If you find you're doing so, you might need to proofread
for revising! Editing a draft for everything is tedious
and boring. Use the adage, "If it ain't broke,
don't fix it." If a sentence or a paragraph seems
adequate, leave it. Keep yourself focused on the difficulties
you encounter.
Specific
Strategies for All Proofreading
Read the paper all the way through silently. Don't necessarily
look for errors. Instead, check for general readability.
Do you stumble over phrases or find it difficult to
understand a particular sentence? Do you find yourself
getting lost in a difficult passage or paragraph? If
so, don't fix it right away but mark the margin so you
can return to the passage later. Keep reading. Return
to the marked passages after you have read the entire
paper through.
Read the paper aloud. This doesn't require an audience.
Instead, listen to yourself. Are the sentences varied
enough in length to avoid monotony? (You'll sense this
if you sound monotonous!) Is there needless repetition
of ideas? Does the draft seem to drift from the point
and then back again? Do you become lost or confused
about what it says? Again, don't stop to fix anything
but keep reading all the way through. Mark the margin
where you happen on problems and come back to them later.
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