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Grades 6-8 | How to Grade Your Own Writing

How to Grade Your Own Writing
If you do not understand something in this section, ask your teacher to explain it or send us your question at Ask the Editor.

5 Things My Story Should NOT Have
Words to Define: orange words in the list
  • a plot line that is the same as or very similar to the plot of a story that is not your own (plagiarism)
  • real names of people (in fiction)
  • personal information, such as telephone numbers and addresses
  • gratuitous violence or gore
  • words that might offend people
Give Me a Break!
Your first draft is finished. Now what? It's time for a break. Sometimes staring at your writing for too long causes you to overlook errors. So, put your writing away for a day or two. Come back to it after the break for a fresh look.
Use Second Pair of Eyes
Have you ever gotten a paper back that had big red circles around obvious mistakes--mistakes you can't believe you didn't find yourself? When you are proofreading your work, your eyes can "auto-correct" some of your writing mistakes as you read, causing you to miss errors. After all, your mind knows what you meant to write. To avoid missing those mistakes, have someone else read over your work. A second pair of eyes always comes in handy when you're proofreading your draft copy. 
Read Out Loud
Have a hard time catching errors in your writing? Try reading your work out loud. You might hear some of your mistakes. Also, ask yourself if your writing makes sense.

How to Grade Your Own Writing

Quick Checklist

Ask these questions about your writing:

Does my piece have a main idea?
Is that main idea on topic for my assignment?
Do I have an audience?
Is the format appropriate for that audience?
Is there a clear structure (beginning, supporting details, and end)?  
Do I include supporting details or specific examples?
Do I stay on topic throughout the whole piece?
Are my ideas original?
Are my transitions logical (transitional words, phrases, sentences)?
Do I use paragraphs?
Do I use correct spelling, capitalization, and punctuation?
Do I avoid slang?
Are the verb tense and point of view consistent?
Do I use complete sentences (no fragments or run-ons)?
Do I use interesting vocabulary?

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