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The College Essay Editing Checklist

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There are really 4 steps to writing the college essay. The first is thinking about how to answer the application essay prompt, the second is writing the first draft, the third is the editing stage, and the fourth is polishing your last draft.

Editing is one of the most important steps, and it's probably the hardest. For this reason we are offering a checklist to help you with the editing stage.

After you have decided what you want to write about to answer the prompt (Stage 1). The first draft (Stage 2) should be an open flow, almost a free-writing stage. You want to try to get everything down, even if it doesn't flow. It's important to get your thoughts down. We call this stage the vomiting stage. You are "throwing every thing up" on your paper: ideas, word, memories and more. That's why Stage 3, the edit, is so hard. You have to clean up the vomit.

Once you have written your first draft, it is best to let it ferment for a few days. So give yourself time to write your application essay; it takes more than one night! Letting your first draft sit for a few days is important to get away from what you have written before you edit so you can look at what you have written with a more objective and fresh eye.

Editing is not polishing. So many students make this mistake. Polishing is fixing up punctuation, changing usage errors, dotting the i's and crossing the t's. The editing stage is not that neat.

When editing you need to

  • Re-organize your paragraphs,
  • Rewrite your paragraphs to develop them more,
  • Rewrite sentences and whole sections for details,
  • Rewrite sentences to make them stronger and more varied,
  • Experiment with word changes, and
  • CUT, cut whole pieces of things that do not lead you directly to answering the essay prompt.

Here is a checklist to help you through the editing process:

Content

  • Check out your beginning paragraph – it does not have to have a thesis statement; rather it should capture the reader's attention.
  • Now look at the conclusion – does it pull your ideas together and speak to the essay prompt?
  • Does your overall essay show, not tell?
  • Are there specific details throughout? There should be no generalities or vagueness.
  • Is the voice of the essay personal and human? You as a person with your sense of humor and your way of relating to friends should show through.
  • Are you using active voice, strong verbs, and interesting phrases?
  • Is your wording simple and clear rather than studious, plodding and abstract?

Structure

  • Does each paragraph move forward to your final point?
  • Are the paragraphs ordered well for effect and to avoid confusion?
  • Are there transitions between paragraphs and a smooth flow from one thought to another?
  • Are your sentences clear and varied?

When you check these things out and then correct them by re-writing, you are doing a true edit.  The polishing can be the final step.

CollegeBasics' new e-book The Basics for Writing College Application Essays: Simple How-to Steps for Writing All College Essays from the Personal Statement to the Short Activity Essay has lots more information about both writing and editing the college application essay. Check it out now.

In addition, you could let professional editors revise your essay to perfection. Check out what EssayEdgecontent details can do for you with their professional editing services.

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