Hello again, now that you've spent the time observing the text, which takes an ginormous amount of time in and of itself, with reading and rereading and recognizing the elements of plots and the elements of literature, that you've also written your rough draft, it is time to go back and do the work to ensure that it's quality. So these are the steps that I take in order to make sure that what I've completed is a good analysis. I recommend doing the first bullet point quite frequently read it aloud. It is when you read it aloud that you start noticing the errors. They're easy to miss when you read it in your head 100,000 times it's still easy to miss when you read it aloud However, it's the likelihood of missing something decreases. And after you read it aloud, you fix your errors and then you have a peer review it, I included a peer review worksheet, if that is helpful, if, if that is something that they would be willing to fill out for you as a guide, otherwise they could read it and offer grammatical suggestions or just sentence structure and see if it's flows smoothly, those kinds of things, your peers could check out that I wouldn't skip this step or the reading aloud yourself step because you can read aloud and many, many times but you will find that nine times out of 10 you still miss something.
It's irritating. I know. But it happens. So have someone else read it, especially if you're going to publish it. The last thing that I would have you do is after it's been read aloud, you fixed it, your peers have read it or appear. I, it would be very beneficial to have more than one.
But I would reread and edited again to ensure that is complete. Once you have done those steps, then you have a final product that you can be proud of. I'm excited to see what you come up with.