The Path to Perfection: How to Improve Your Research Paper
Illustration: Unsplash, author: NIKON CORPORATION
By Viktoria Shabanova,
manager at the Academic Writing Center.
She graduated from Russian State University for the Humanities
with a degree in Foreign (British) Philology.
Every author of a research paper inevitably faces the problem of editing and proofreading their texts as the text readability and accuracy determine whether the journal will accept the article or not. Some phrases may turn out to be difficult to read, or in some sentences, there might be way too much terminology — improving and polishing the text always rests on the author’s shoulders.
There is a difference between proofreading and editing. Editing occurs throughout the revision process while the author improves the readability of the text and assesses its clarity, logic, and style. Proofreading appears on the final stage of the writing process to eliminate errors in grammar, punctuation, and spelling.
Last year, I had an opportunity to attend a course “Proofreading for Publishing: Polishing Your Academic Writing.” It was taught by Lisa Chou, a brilliant expert in academic writing. I was the participant for whom much of the information was new. The course helped me understand what to focus on for successful text revising.
I decided to share some tips for improving an academic text, as well as the things that native editors usually pay attention to. If you are just beginning your journey in academic writing, read on!
Editing
A novice writer can start with the following strategies to enhance the text readability:
1. Strengthen verbs
Look through your text and try to avoid:
- nominalization (signal word endings: -ment, -ion, -ance, etc.)
No good: We took all the facts into consideration. Better: We considered all the facts. - weak verbs (signal words: to be, have, do, make, provide, perform, get, seem, serve, etc.)
No good: The theme has many different reflections in Russian culture. Better: Russian culture reflects this theme in different ways. - passive voice (signal words: to be + past participle + by…)
No good: Intermediality in Russian culture was examined in this project. Better: In this project, we examined the intermediality in Russian culture.
2. Clarify pronouns
- pronouns “there”, “it” with “to be” & relative pronouns “that,” “which,” or “who”
No good: Culture always goes hand in hand with art, but it is related to creativity. Better: Culture always goes hand in hand with art, but the latter is related to creativity.
3. Decrease prepositions
- prepositions (signal words: of, by, to, for, toward, on, at, from, in, with, etc.)
No good: The focus of this project was to study intermediality in Russian culture. Better: This project examined intermediality in Russian culture.
4. Cut unnecessary words
No good: The theme of intermediality in Russian culture has not been studied much. Better: The theme of intermediality in Russian culture remains understudied.
5. Check the consistency of style
It is also essential to look at the text organization. Headings and subheadings help structure the text and attract the reader’s attention. All headings should be short and consistent in terms of phrasing. The author also needs to design the headings according to the style they are following (APA, Chicago, MLA, etc.).
A citation style is a set of guidelines on how to cite sources in academic writing. You always need a citation whenever you quote, paraphrase, or summarize a source to avoid plagiarism.