Here this should help, but let me know if you need more help!
The correct matches of the questions to the step in writing would be as follows:
A. What voice am I writing in?
This question would most likely be drafting. It is the step where the author would begin to develop the text, organizing the thoughts he wants to have.
B. Are my sentence boundaries identified correctly (no fragments or run-ons)?
This would be the editing step where you proofread the whole text looking at errors especially structural errors.
C. Have I kept voice and tense the same throughout?
This would represent the revising step where you make a run through to each sentence and see whether you are being consistent with the use of words.
D. What is my purpose?
This would be the planning step. The very first step in writing would planning on what to write and what you would like to convey to the readers.
E. What is my evidence (and where will I get it)?
This would be the pre-writing stage where you collect your sources for the subject you want to write.
<span>B. Women are less interested in concrete ideas than men are.
Evidence: "</span><span>I delighted in investigating the facts relative to the actual world; she busied herself in following the aerial creations of the poets."</span>
Answer:
Look around at a few examples of weather-related poems and use unorthodox language to describe what an avalanche might do during it's fall, and the effects it may have on it's surrounding areas.