Writing tool

Draft one strong paragraph at a time.

This is the bridge from plan to paper: one claim, one evidence lane, one unit of analysis.

Paragraph work is where vague ideas get exposed. Use this when you know the point but need the sentence-level draft.

You already know the paragraph claim.

You have evidence in mind but need help turning it into analysis.

You want to move from outline bullets into draft prose.

Public preview
0 / 2,000 charactersOne anonymous preview, then continue in the studio.

Simple flow

Use one preview, then keep moving.

This stays intentionally short on purpose. Try one pass here, then continue in the studio if you want to refine the same draft or switch tools.

1. Preview

Run one fast pass on this page.

2. Continue

Open the writing studio if you want to keep editing or switch modes.

3. Ground it

Jump into a book-specific essay kit when the assignment is already fixed and you need evidence, not guesswork.

Example

How students use this

Example input

To Kill a Mockingbird; focus: moral courage; evidence: Atticus continues the trial despite social pressure; analysis: courage is persistence without applause.

Example output

Lee frames moral courage as persistence under pressure rather than easy heroism. Atticus’s willingness to continue the trial despite the town’s hostility shows that integrity matters most when social approval disappears.

Use cases

Best times to open it

Draft a body paragraph from one outline point.

Turn section-specific evidence into explanation.

Build a stronger middle when the intro is already done.

FAQ

Questions students ask before using it

Can this help with text evidence?

Yes, but it should work from paraphrased evidence and your own notes rather than direct copyrighted quotes.

What comes after paragraph drafting?

Usually another paragraph, then conclusion, then grammar and clarity polish.