4.2 Revision Exercise
Requisitos de finalización
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1. Reverse Outlining Explained
1.1. Further Reverse Outline Explanation
Vanderbilt University's writing center defines the Reverse Outline process and offers exercises to enrich it. We'll work through their steps now:
To make a reverse outline:
- Number the paragraphs of your paper. (You can print your paper or find a way to do this on an electronic version)
- On a separate sheet of paper, or using the note cards, list the number of paragraphs in your paper, giving
a line or two for each number (or a card for each)
- Turn to your paper, read the first paragraph, and write on your list or card the main point you make in
this paragraph.
- If you can’t summarize the content of a paragraph, you probably have multiple ideas in play in that paragraph that may need revising, note each of the ideas expressed in the paragraph.
- Do the same for each paragraph of your paper in turn.
- Now focus on your list (or cards), which reflects the direction of your paper
- How well does the list cohere?
- How does one idea connect to the next?
- Are the connections between ideas made explicit in your writing?
- Use your outline to do four things:
- See whether each paragraph plays a role in supporting your thesis.
- What needs to be revised – your thesis? Or the order of the points in your argument?
- Look for unnecessary repetition of ideas.
- Compare your reverse outline with your paper to see whether the sentences in each paragraph are related to the main point of that paragraph, per the reverse outline.