This medium-level worksheet has students fill in blanks, and match items from two columns to practice editing & revising skills.
It includes 10 questions across 2 sections for focused practice.
Style:
Editing & Revising
Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1. A peer editor is a classmate who reads your writing and suggests improvements.
2. When giving feedback, it helps to start with something positive before suggesting changes.
3. Reading your draft aloud to yourself helps you hear mistakes your eyes might miss.
4. A revision checklist is a list of questions a writer answers to check their own work.
5. Waiting a day before rereading your draft gives you fresh eyes for spotting errors.
6. Constructive feedback focuses on how to improve writing rather than just pointing out mistakes.
7. Highlighting every transition in a paragraph helps a writer see if ideas connect logically.
8. Underlining the topic sentence of each paragraph checks whether every paragraph has a clear focus.
9. A writer should consider all suggested changes before deciding which ones to accept.
Part B: Matching
Match each item on the left to the correct answer on the right.
1. Match each item to its correct answer.
"Your opening paragraph really hooked me as a reader."
→ Positive feedback about a writing strength
Feedback about word choice and repetition
"I noticed you used 'said' five times — try varying the dialogue tags."
→ Feedback about word choice and repetition
Feedback about paragraph organization
"This paragraph seems out of order — try moving it after your introduction."
→ Feedback about paragraph organization
Feedback pointing out a grammar error
"You have a comma splice in the third sentence."
→ Feedback pointing out a grammar error
Positive feedback about a writing strength
Editing & Revising
★ Part A: Fill in the Blank
Write the missing word or number on each line.
1) A peer editor is a classmate who reads your writing and suggests improvements.
2) When giving feedback, it helps to start with something positive before suggesting changes.
3) Reading your draft aloud to yourself helps you hear mistakes your eyes might miss.
4) A revision checklist is a list of questions a writer answers to check their own work.
5) Waiting a day before rereading your draft gives you fresh eyes for spotting errors.
6) Constructive feedback focuses on how to improve writing rather than just pointing out mistakes.
7) Highlighting every transition in a paragraph helps a writer see if ideas connect logically.
8) Underlining the topic sentence of each paragraph checks whether every paragraph has a clear focus.
9) A writer should consider all suggested changes before deciding which ones to accept.
★ Part B: Matching
Match each item on the left to the correct answer on the right.
1) Match each item to its correct answer.
"Your opening paragraph really hooked me as a reader."
→ Positive feedback about a writing strength
Feedback about word choice and repetition
"I noticed you used 'said' five times — try varying the dialogue tags."
→ Feedback about word choice and repetition
Feedback about paragraph organization
"This paragraph seems out of order — try moving it after your introduction."
→ Feedback about paragraph organization
Feedback pointing out a grammar error
"You have a comma splice in the third sentence."
→ Feedback pointing out a grammar error
Positive feedback about a writing strength
Ready to Practice?
Complete each section carefully.
10 Questions
10-15 minutes
Auto-graded
Retry anytime
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