Template:Student project tutorial/core/project draft exists

You've started your draft. Cool! Your next goal will be to prepare your draft for its debut as a live Wikipedia article. Once it has a few paragraphs of well-sourced content, it should be eligible for "Did you know" (DYK), the section on Wikipedia's main page that highlights new articles. Here's what to aim for:
 * Length: Expand your draft until it has at least 1500 characters of prose (excluding references, bullet point lists, block quotes, and anything else besides the text of the article). That's usually around 3-4 paragraphs.  This will be a short overview that you can build on after it's live. If it's longer than about 3000 characters, it's definitely time to take a break from expanding it until after it's live.
 * References: All the information in your draft should be supported by inline citations to the reliable sources it's based on. Typically, that means one footnote for each paragraph, at least.  For the basics of how citations work, see User:Chzz/help/ref.  For more detail on citing sources, see Citing sources.
 * Your own words: Wikipedia has strict rules against plagiarism and copyright violation, so everything in your draft should be in your own words. Don't use any significant portion of text from your sources or anywhere else (unless it's a direct quotation), and be especially careful to avoid close paraphrasing of your sources.  (You'll often end up with close paraphrasing if you start by copying and pasting a block of text from a source and rewrite it phrase by phrase or sentence by sentence in your own words.)

Once your article is well-referenced and long enough to qualify, it's time to move it into Wikipedia! Don't worry, it doesn't have to be perfect from the very beginning. Everything in Wikipedia is a work in progress.

 To move your article, click here. Replace "User:/" with "", then press "Move page".