Toggle Navigation
  • Invent
  • Arrange
  • Revise
  • Edit
  • Reflect
  • Explain
  • Convince
  • Explore
  • Document
  • About

Paradigm Online Writing Assistantby Chuck Guilford


To edit well, it helps to know the basics of grammar and mechanics, but equally important are good editing practices.

 

Most Popular

  • Basic Punctuation
  • Designing Effective Sentences
  • Six Problem Areas
  • Freewriting
  • The Journalists' Questions

User Menu

  • Home
  • Get Involved
  • All Blogs
  • FAQs
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Home

Start Writing

There is no single best way to begin a writing project. What's best is what gets you going and builds momentum for the journey ahead. You may want to start right in on a draft or do some pre-planning.

Often, simply Choosing a Subject can be a challenge. You could start Freewriting to locate your subject and generate ideas. Or you might prefer to first gather information from Outside Sources, or to brainstorm using The Journalists' Questions.

Whether you're writing an informal essay, a technical report, or the next great American novel, the suggestions in Discovering What to Write will help you get going.

Write Strong Sentences

Effective sentences are vital to your writing. They are fundamental carriers and shapers of meaning—the pulse of style. If you want to work on your sentences, try the following Paradigm sections: Basic Sentence Concepts, Expanding the Basic Pattern, Six Problem Areas, Designing Effective Sentences.

For help with punctuation, try Basic Punctuation.

Arranging and Ordering

Unlike pyramid charts and cluster maps, which can show complex organizational relationships in a single glance, your writing itself is sequential. Readers don't encounter your ideas all at once but one after another.

Read more ...

Expanding the Basic Pattern

Writing made up of only such little sentences would quickly grow monotonous and would also sound like it had been written by someone without much language experience. Fortunately, the basic S V/C pattern allows for easy expansion in almost unlimited ways.

Read more ...

Global and Local Perspectives

Revision means "re-seeing." Strong revisers develop a "critical zoom lens" that allows them to shift perspective from broad overview to minute detail, and to see how these levels of composition relate. To revise well, then, you must become a perceptive and imaginative reader of your own work, a reader who can anticipate another reader's response and see new ways the writing might evolve.

Read more ...

Occasions for Informal Essays

A thoughtful letter to an old friend, a reflection on your education or ethnic heritage, a childhood reminiscence—these could all be informal essays. In writing, informality depends less on subject or structure than on the writing context. Informal essays assume a personal stance. They suggest close connections among writer, reader, and subject.

Read more ...

Immersion and Interaction

At the start, you need to get authentically and personally involved with your subject. You need to get inside the subject and get the subject inside of you. Let go of preconceived notions about proper or expected ways to respond. Instead, connect the subject with your own world of experience and understanding. Identify issues you care about.

Read more ...

Arguing in Context

Like other types of writing, arguments respond to specific situations: a need is not being met, a person is being treated unfairly, an important concept is misunderstood, an outdated policy needs to be reexamined. Strong arguments respond effectively to such writing contexts.

Read more ...

Occasions for Thesis/Support Essays

Thesis/support essays convey a central idea clearly and succinctly. Because thesis/support essays open up and expand upon a single main point, they're suited to short reports, position papers, and critical analyses. Because they can, with practice, be written quickly, they're also handy for essay exams and letters of application or recommendation. As you become familiar with them, you'll no doubt see other uses.

Read more ...

For This Life

Check out this new book-length online poetry collection by Paradigm creator Chuck Guilford.

Videos

Get the Paradigm Book

Altogether Now: Essays on Poetry Writing, and Teaching

Blogging Menu

  • Latest Post
  • Community Blogs

Login Form

  • Create an account
  • Forgot your username?
  • Forgot your password?

Gold Star Resource

Web Feet Seal of Approval

 Clem's Pick Award

Webcrawler Select

Study Web Award

Approved by Schoolzone's team of independent education reviewers

Blue Web'n Learning Site

Editor's Choice

Links2Go--Key Resource
Excite Web Guide

Scout Report Selection

 

Partners with Poetryexpress

Back to Top

© 2026 Paradigm Online Writing Assistant