EasyBib Blog

Your Resource for Information Literacy

  • Home
  • Product reviews
  • Citation Guides
  • Educator Resources
  • Student Resources

Outline

Once you’ve gathered information on your topic, sifted through the good sources, and taken good notes, it’s time to conquer the next step: outlining.

Outlining is a helpful step in the writing process. It will force you to think about how separate ideas in your research fit together so that you can write a cohesive paper.

Get started with Grouping Your Notes »

 

Creative Commons License

Newsletter Sign Up

Follow Us

     

Student Resources

  • Student Resources
    • Research guide
      • Research Quick Guide
      • What is plagiarism?
      • Website credibility
      • Improving Visuals of Presentations
        • Clean, Simple Fonts
        • Easy-to-read Color Scheme
        • Consistency
        • Keep Text to a Minimum
        • Images & Animations
        • Give Credit!
        • Everything Else
      • Primary, Secondary & Tertiary Sources
        • A. What is a Primary Source?
        • B. Examples of Primary Sources
        • C. What is a Secondary Source?
        • D. Examples of Secondary Sources
        • E. What is a Tertiary Source?
        • F. Examples of Tertiary Sources
        • G. Using primary, secondary and tertiary sources in research
      • Paraphrasing, Patchwriting, Direct Quotes
        • A. How to paraphrase?
        • B. An example of an effective paraphrase
        • C. An example of a poor paraphrase
        • D. Patchwriting
        • E. Direct Quotes
    • Writing guide
      • Brainstorm
        • A. Choosing a Topic
        • B. Determing the Scope of Your Paper
        • C. Preliminary Research
      • Research
        • A. Finding Sources
        • B. Off-The-Wall Sources
        • C. Evaluating Sources for Credibility
        • D. Software Tools, Tips, and Techniques
        • E. Taking Notes
      • Outline
        • A. Grouping Your Notes
        • B. Writing a Thesis
        • C. Creating an Outline
      • Write
        • A. Formatting
        • B. Titling Your Paper
        • C. Audience & Academic Tone
        • D. Introductory Paragraph
        • E. Body Paragraphs
        • F. Concluding Paragraph
      • Proofread and Revise
        • A. Common Grammatical Errors
        • B. Spell Check
        • C. Revising
    • Topics Guides
      • Global Warming
      • The Catcher in the Rye
      • Human Cloning
      • The Great Gatsby

Info Lit Resources

MLA Citations Series
Website Evaluation Bootcamp
Colleges' Student Usage Spotlight
Plagiarism Prevention Series
Getting by with Google Presentation
Graphic Organizer Handout

About us

About us
Press
Advertise with us
Terms of Service
Privacy Policy
Contact us

Products

MyBib Pro
School Edition
Library Edition
EasyBib for iPhone
EasyBib for Google Apps

Help

Citation Guide
Knowledge Base
Librarians & Teachers
Developers & API
We cite according to the 7th ed. of MLA, 6th ed. of APA, and 16th ed. of Chicago (7th ed. Turabian).
© 2001-2012 ImagineEasy Solutions, LLC