How writers write
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All changes made offline will automatically sync when you reconnect.
This application requires a tablet or computer for the full experience.
Please access this app from a larger device to use all features including:
• Writing and editing
• Real-time collaboration
• Revision tools
• Analytics and feedback
How writers write
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Active User: A user who started at least one session in the selected time period (logged in and used the app).
Session: A single login period from when a user signs in until: (a) they close the app, (b) they are inactive for 30+ minutes, or (c) 4 hours have elapsed (whichever comes first).
Session Duration: Measured from login to session end. Capped at 4 hours maximum per session. Only completed sessions are included in averages.
Activity: Any user action such as opening documents, using writing modes, creating comments, editing text, etc. Resets the idle timer.
Mode Entry: When a user activates a writing mode (Point Prediction, Key Terms, etc.).
Feature Usage: Tracks use of specific features like Comments, Citations, Draft Comparison, Says/Does Analysis, etc.
| User | Sessions | Total Time (min) | Last Active |
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| Feature | Usage Count | Unique Users |
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Choose a template to get started or create a blank document
Create an assignment prompt for students
Organize your ideas hierarchically with a structured outline
Collect and organize quotes, data, and sources for your writing
Capture individual ideas on virtual index cards for easy reorganization
Reflect on your writing process and evaluate your progress
Start with a clean slate for notes, brainstorming, or freewriting
Compare two drafts to see what has changed between versions
Generate a visual word frequency analysis from your draft
Import an existing PDF, image, or document from your computer
No citations in your Citation Manager yet.
Answer these questions to generate the correct citation format:
Example: "Smith argues that..." (Yes) vs. "This theory suggests..." (No)
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Enter email addresses separated by commas or one per line. Students will see assigned projects in their "My Projects" list.
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Students not in teams will work individually
No teams created yet. Click "Create Team" to start.
⚠️ Warning: Removing students from teams or moving them between teams will affect their access to existing work. Students removed from teams will get a new individual project.
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Drag students here from teams to make them individual
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Choose a mode to help revise and reflect on your draft. Each mode provides a specialized interface for a different writing strategy.
Read your draft sentence by sentence and reflect on reader expectations.
Create groups of key terms to highlight throughout your draft. Use asterisks (*) for wildcards to match word variations.
Track your sources: For each source, enter the source name (e.g., "Smith 2021") in the first field, then list key terms, phrases, or concepts associated with that source in the second field. Separate multiple terms with commas.
Analyze integration: After highlighting, look for monochrome sections (single source) vs. multicolored sections (multiple sources in conversation).
Tip: Use * as a wildcard (e.g., analy* matches "analyze", "analysis", etc.)
💡 Tip: When you're ready to review all your analyses together, create a snapshot using the button below. This generates a timestamped document showing all your paragraphs with their Says/Does analyses in a table format.
No citations yet. Add your first citation above.
It's often said that people are either born writers or they're not. Research tells a different story: we all grow as writers the same way, by learning to make writerly choices more consciously and strategically.
That's how this site aims to help.
Popular word processors weren't designed by writing professors, and it shows. Platforms like Word and Google Docs reflect and reinforce wrong ideas about writing—ideas that prevent or even undermine the development of writing skills.
Like "adulting," "writing" is an umbrella term that holds—and obscures—hundreds of distinct activities that eventually lead to clear, polished prose: reading, note-taking, brainstorming, drafting, revising, restructuring, and more.
Each of these tasks requires totally different skills and cognitive processes. Experienced writers know this and develop highly complex workflows.
You wouldn't know any of this by looking at Microsoft Word. These processes could not be intuited by staring at a blank document and blinking cursor.
Traditional word processors are good at text entry, and that's about it. Any writer will tell you that writing is 99 percent revision, but ordinary word processors provide no support here.
Revision tools are limited to spell check and grammar check—as though the things that separate first and final drafts are small sentence-level mistakes. This is a poor understanding of revision, and of writing in general.
Writers have been set up to fail. No wonder the appeal of chatbots eager to do the work for you.
The Writing Program reflects and reinforces how experienced writers actually write. There are places for planning, note-taking, reflecting, and synthesizing. But not all of these processes happen at once.
Like a prism separates white light into its constituent colors, this app breaks down the writing process into its constituent tasks, so it doesn't overwhelm. In this way, writers can make writerly choices more deliberately and strategically.
The result: more sophisticated ideas, articulated in clearer, simpler language.
Rather than treating writing as a linear process, this platform offers different "modes" to help you engage with specific revision tasks:
Manage your entire writing project in one organized space:
While AI-powered processors may offer to do the work for you, this platform is built on a different principle: learning tools should promote, not bypass, the deliberative practices that make writing the key to learning.
This platform doesn't do the work for you—it offers a framework that helps you do it yourself. By engaging actively with these tools, you'll develop the conscious, strategic approach that defines expert writers.
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