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7.6: Working with Peers

  • Page ID
    59872
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    Learning Objectives

    • Identify strategies for development

    Revision doesn’t have to happen by yourself. You can call upon your peers to help you develop and clarify your draft.

    Talk it Out

    Students talking on a porch

     

    Find some peers and have a conversation about your piece of writing. Have a conversation where you tell them your ideas and verbalize each of your points. If possible, record your conversation. Then listen to the recording–sometimes valuable ideas or insights will come out of this conversation. What did you say more clearly in the conversation than you wrote in the draft? What did you say that needs to be included in your draft? What kinds of questions or points did your peers make that could be included in your draft?

    What I really mean is

    Two students talking around laptops at a table

    Ask a friend to read through your draft, and mark places where difficult or complicated ideas don’t seem to be coming through clearly. Then, look at each passage and explain to your friend what you meant to say in that passage, and ask your friend to write down what you are saying. Sometimes verbally articulating an idea helps to clarify it.

    CC licensed content, Original
    • Working with Peers. Authored by: Karen Forgette. Provided by: University of Mississippi. License: CC BY: Attribution
    • Strategies for Development. Authored by: Jenny Bucksbarg. Provided by: University of Mississippi. License: CC BY: Attribution

    7.6: Working with Peers is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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