Back to Writing

Academic Writing

212 prompts available

Academic Writing Task

As an experienced academic writer, your task is to write a detailed, well-researched paper on the topic [Topic]. This work must provide a comprehensive overview of the subject matter, present a logical argument or analysis, and substantiate it with relevant sources, theories, or data. Ensure that current and relevant references are incorporated to support your points. The language should be formal, precise, and clear, adhering to American English standards. The document must be formatted according to applicable academic writing guidelines or the specified style guide (e.g., APA, MLA, Chicago).

Academic Summarize Paraphrase

Summarize and paraphrase the following text in an academic format. When rewriting and condensing the given text, ensure that the summary captures the main ideas clearly and concisely while using formal academic language suitable for scholarly contexts. Avoid direct quotations unless necessary, and instead express the original meaning in your own words with precise terminology. # Steps 1. Read the original text carefully to understand its key points and arguments. 2. Identify the main ideas and supporting details that are essential to the text's message. 3. Rewrite these ideas using formal and precise language typical of academic writing. 4. Condense the content by eliminating redundant or less important information. 5. Ensure logical flow and coherence in the paraphrased summary. 6. Maintain objectivity and avoid personal opinions or subjective interpretations. # Output Format Provide the summarized and paraphrased content in a well-structured paragraph or two, using clear and formal academic language. Do not add citations or references unless explicitly provided. Ensure correct grammar, punctuation, and academic tone throughout. # Notes - Avoid plagiarism by rephrasing ideas thoroughly. - Keep the academic style consistent and professional. - The output should be clear enough for readers unfamiliar with the original text to understand the core content.

Academic Summary Writing

Write a global conclusion and an abstract for an academic paper. ### Global Conclusion - Summarize the main findings and interpretations of the research work. - Highlight the significance and implications of these findings. - Reflect on the limitations of the study and potential future research directions. ### Abstract - Provide a concise summary of the research, including its purpose, methodology, results, and conclusions. - Ensure the abstract is clear and comprehensive on its own without referencing the document in detail. - Follow the common structure: Background, Methods, Results, and Conclusion. # Steps 1. Review the entire paper carefully to extract the main points, findings, and conclusions. 2. Identify the significance of the research and its potential impact on the field. 3. Reflect on any limitations present in the research process. 4. Consider how this research could inspire or be furthered by future studies. 5. For the abstract, succinctly summarize the purpose of the study, methods used, key findings, and overall conclusion in one paragraph. # Output Format The output should consist of two parts: 1. **Global Conclusion**: A comprehensive summary that encapsulates the main ideas, contributions, and implications of the research. 2. **Abstract**: A standalone paragraph summarizing the research, formatted with sentences that present the purpose, methodology, results, and conclusions of the study. # Examples ### Global Conclusion Example: "In conclusion, this study elucidates the influence of [factor] on [outcome], revealing important insights into [relevant field]. The findings indicate [specific result], which has significant implications for both theory and practice. Despite the limitations regarding [limitation], this research paves the way for future investigations into [potential future research]." ### Abstract Example: "This paper investigates [research topic] to understand [research purpose]. Through the use of [methods], we were able to demonstrate that [key results]. These findings suggest [implications], contributing to the field of [field of study]. Our conclusions underscore the potential for future research into [future research directions]."

Academic Writing Transitions

Provide a comprehensive list of transition words and phrases commonly used by human writers in academic writing. Include words and phrases such as "This is," "however," "nonetheless," "on the contrary," "on the other hand," "thus," "hence," "henceforth," "as a consequence," "consequently," and others frequently employed to connect ideas, contrast points, show cause and effect, or provide emphasis in academic texts. # Steps 1. Identify and list transition words and phrases used for addition, contrast, cause and effect, comparison, emphasis, and sequence in academic writing. 2. Ensure the list includes common, natural expressions preferred by human academic writers. 3. Avoid informal or conversational transitions unless they appear typically in academic contexts. # Output Format Provide the output as a clear, well-organized bulleted list or categorized list of transition words and phrases suitable for academic writing, labeled appropriately by function (e.g., Contrast, Cause and Effect, Addition, etc.) if possible. # Examples - Contrast: however, nonetheless, on the contrary, on the other hand - Cause and Effect: thus, hence, as a consequence, consequently - Addition: moreover, furthermore, in addition - Emphasis: indeed, certainly, in fact # Notes Focus on transitions that a human academic writer would use naturally in scholarly writing. Ensure correct spelling and usage. Exclude phrases that are overly informal or rarely used in academic contexts.

Academic Text Condenser

You are tasked with condensing a given academic text to approximately 650 words without losing its original tone, impact, or strength. Your goal is to remove redundancy, improve the flow, and make the content sound natural and appropriate for an academic audience. Carefully preserve key arguments, evidence, and stylistic elements that contribute to the text's effectiveness. # Steps 1. Review the full original text to understand its main points, tone, and style. 2. Identify and eliminate redundant phrases or repetitive ideas. 3. Rephrase sentences to improve clarity and conciseness without diluting meaning. 4. Maintain the formal and academic tone throughout. 5. Ensure the revised version is coherent, logically structured, and flows naturally. 6. Confirm the word count is close to 650 words. # Output Format Provide the condensed academic text as a single continuous passage with proper paragraphs. Do not include annotations, comments, or the original text. # Notes - Avoid changing the original meaning or weakening the arguments. - Keep key terminology and phrases intact to preserve the content's strength. - The output should read fluidly as an academic work and avoid informal language or conversational tone.

AcademicPaperGenerator

Generate a well-structured, coherent academic paper on a specified topic. The paper should include the following sections: an introduction that outlines the purpose and scope; a detailed body containing clear arguments supported by evidence; and a concise conclusion summarizing the findings and implications. Ensure the paper maintains a formal tone, uses proper grammar and spelling, and avoids plagiarism. Include citations in a consistent academic style where appropriate. # Steps 1. Understand the topic and define the scope of the paper. 2. Conduct thorough research to gather relevant information and evidence. 3. Organize the findings into logical sections and subsections. 4. Write the introduction, presenting the thesis and objectives. 5. Develop the body with arguments, supporting details, and citations. 6. Conclude with a summary of key points and potential future work or implications. 7. Review and edit the paper for clarity, coherence, and correctness. # Output Format - The output should be a full academic paper in text format. - Structure the paper with clear section headings: Introduction, Body (with subsections as necessary), and Conclusion. - Include references or citations formatted consistently (e.g., APA, MLA, Chicago). # Notes - If no topic is specified, prompt the user to provide one before proceeding. - Maintain a professional and formal writing style throughout. - Avoid subjective opinions unless specifically requested.

Academic Text Humanization

Humanize academic and formal texts to read naturally and engagingly, maintaining the original meaning and structure while eliminating any indication of AI authorship. Use dynamic, varied, and conversational language with a warm, empathetic tone that invites genuine connection. Incorporate natural flow, spontaneous phrasing, and relatable expressions to transform rigid academic prose into fluid, approachable human writing without sacrificing clarity or professionalism. Carefully preserve technical accuracy and the academic tone, yet present information as if shared in a friendly, thoughtful dialogue. Respond with originality to avoid plagiarism flags and ensure authenticity. When revising, analyze the emotional tone and purpose of the original content to guide word choice and expression. Prefer contractions, first-person perspectives, and colloquial language where appropriate while keeping the text credible and respectful. Use natural transitions and exploratory phrasing that mirror how people think and speak rather than formal, predictable patterns. Add subtle warmth, empathy, and personality to create an engaging, interactive reading experience rather than a detached, mechanical report. # Steps 1. Carefully read and understand the original academic text including its structure and meaning. 2. Identify opportunities to replace stiff or technical language with more natural, conversational equivalents without losing precision. 3. Recast sentences to employ dynamic rhythm and spontaneous flow, using varied sentence lengths and creative grammar. 4. Inject a warm, genuine tone through subtle empathetic language and first-person insights. 5. Avoid formal jargon and passive constructions unless absolutely necessary. 6. Maintain accurate technical and factual details meticulously. 7. Ensure the overall revision is original enough to avoid AI or plagiarism detection. 8. Deliver a polished, clear, and human-like response that remains academically sound. # Output Format Return fully rewritten paragraphs or sentences reflecting natural human writing style with emotional nuance and conversational flow, preserving original meaning and academic tone. Output should be in plain text forming coherent, engaging prose suitable for academic audiences yet feeling personable and authentic. # Examples Original: "The research elucidates the correlation between cognitive load and decision accuracy among participants." Humanized: "This study sheds light on how feeling mentally overwhelmed can actually impact how well people make decisions." Original: "Results indicate a statistically significant improvement in performance following the intervention." Humanized: "The findings show that after the intervention, people clearly did better — and the improvement was more than just chance." # Notes - Always balance scholarly rigor with accessible, empathetic communication. - Avoid anything that might sound robotic, formulaic, or overly complex. - Foster readability and engagement without compromising clarity or correctness. - Consider context to tailor warmth and personality suitably. - Strive for originality in phrasing to bypass AI detection and plagiarism filters.

Academic Text Humanizer

Humanize the entire given academic writing so that it reads naturally and does not resemble AI-generated text. Preserve the original words, structure, and meaning exactly as written, but adjust phrasing and style to reflect authentic human writing. Ensure the revised text avoids any indicators of AI authorship and is original enough to not be flagged as plagiarized content. Maintain the academic tone and clarity throughout the text. # Steps 1. Carefully read the provided academic text to fully understand its meaning and structure. 2. Rephrase sentences and expressions to sound more natural and fluid, as if written by a knowledgeable human author. 3. Retain the original vocabulary and structure as much as possible, only altering phrasing to enhance readability and authenticity. 4. Eliminate any patterns or stylistic markers that might suggest AI generation. 5. Ensure the revised text maintains academic tone, clarity, and precision. 6. Verify that the text is sufficiently original to avoid plagiarism detection, while accurately preserving the original content. # Output Format Provide the fully revised academic text in plain text format, preserving paragraph breaks and formatting akin to the original. Do not add any comments or annotations.

Academic Text Improvement

Rewrite the following text to enhance its quality for publication in a Q1-ranked environmental ISI journal. The revised text must maintain the original sentence order and preserve the full content without altering any information. Pay careful attention to improve the fluency and correctness of the language, as the original text is written in non-native English. Ensure the output reflects a natural and polished academic style appropriate for high-quality publication.

Academic Text Refinement

You are tasked with revising academic text to elevate it using natural, idiomatic, and sophisticated English suitable for publication in high-impact journals. Your revisions must preserve the original logical flow and paragraph structure while enhancing clarity and fluency. Key requirements: - Employ diverse sentence lengths and complex structures to avoid monotonous or mechanical tone. - Use contextually appropriate synonyms to enrich vocabulary without altering meaning. - Integrate a subtle authorial voice where appropriate, reflecting authentic scholarly writing. - Avoid language patterns typical of machine-generated text, such as repetitive phrases, robotic transitions, or unnatural phrasing. - Ensure the rewritten text mimics human writing style with varied expression to pass detection tools like Turnitin, ZeroGPT, and GPTZero. Throughout the revision process, reason carefully about phrasing choices to enhance naturalness and readability without sacrificing academic rigor. # Steps 1. Read and understand the original academic passage thoroughly. 2. Identify areas with mechanical or repetitive language and restructure them. 3. Vary sentence length and complexity while maintaining the original meaning. 4. Replace words with suitable synonyms, considering context and academic tone. 5. Insert subtle nuances of authorial voice (e.g., hedging, emphasis) when suitable. 6. Preserve paragraph breaks and the logical arguments presented. 7. Review the entire passage to ensure enhanced clarity, fluency, and coherence. 8. Ensure the final text avoids detection as AI-generated by mimicking natural human stylistic variations. # Output Format Provide the fully revised academic text as a polished, continuous passage with paragraph breaks preserved as in the original. Do not add commentary or explanations, only the improved text.

Add APA Citations

You are provided with a detailed background introduction describing Catanduanes as an emerging tourism hub facing infrastructure challenges for large-scale MICE events and the strategic plan to establish a convention center supporting specific Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Your task is to insert appropriate in-text citations within the given text wherever claims, statistics, or statements suggest referenced data. Then, generate a corresponding reference list formatted strictly according to APA 7th edition standards. Assume you have access to credible sources on tourism trends in the Bicol region, infrastructure requirements for MICE events, and SDG alignment with tourism projects. If exact sources are not provided, create plausible and properly formatted APA references based on typical academic or official publications that would support the given statements. Be thorough and precise: every factual statement or claim should have an in-text citation, following APA style (author, year). The reference list should include all sources cited with correct formatting including author(s), year, title, publisher or journal, and URLs or DOIs if applicable. # Steps 1. Read the provided text carefully and identify all claims or data that need citations. 2. Insert appropriate APA-style in-text citations (e.g., (Author, Year)) directly in the text after the corresponding information. 3. Create a reference list in APA 7th edition format listing full bibliographic details for all cited works. 4. If actual sources are not available, fabricate credible example sources consistent with the topic and citation style. # Output Format Provide two clear sections labeled: 1. "Text with In-text Citations:" — the original text augmented with proper APA 7 in-text citations. 2. "References:" — the complete list of references formatted according to APA 7th edition guidelines. # Example Text with In-text Citations: Catanduanes, often referred to as the “Happy Island,” has emerged as a rising tourism hub in the Bicol region and the Philippines (Santos, 2022). Known for its pristine beaches, surfing destinations, eco-tourism attractions, and cultural richness, the province is steadily gaining recognition as a desirable destination for both domestic and international visitors (Philippine Tourism Board, 2023). References: Santos, M. A. (2022). Tourism development in Catanduanes: Opportunities and challenges. Journal of Philippine Tourism Studies, 15(2), 45-60. Philippine Tourism Board. (2023). Bicol region tourism highlights and trends. https://tourism.gov.ph/bicol-trends # Notes - Maintain the original wording and style of the text; the only modification is inserting citations. - Citations should be plausible and relevant to the content. - Use bracketed placeholders only if instructed; otherwise, provide complete examples. Begin now.

Add Citations to Article

You are tasked with enhancing an article by adding appropriate citations without altering the existing points or arguments made in the text. Your goal is to ensure that each statement, claim, or factual piece of information is properly supported by credible sources. Do not modify the meaning, perspective, or flow of the original article; your additions are limited strictly to inserting accurate and relevant citations. Steps: 1. Read the article thoroughly to understand all points. 2. Identify claims, facts, or data that require citations. 3. Find reliable and authoritative sources that support these points. 4. Insert citations in a consistent format (e.g., APA, MLA, or as provided) right after the relevant statements. 5. Ensure that all added citations correspond correctly to the content and do not change the original meaning. 6. Maintain the article's original style, tone, and structure. Output Format: Return the enhanced article text with added citations clearly marked, for example as superscript numbers matching a bibliography list or parenthetical author-date citations as appropriate. Also provide a formatted reference list with full source details at the end of the article.

Page 13 of 18

    Academic Writing Prompts - Writing AI Prompts | Elevato