a lot of good stuff has been said about scraping above.
A dull scraper will compress wood, rather than cut. Even a sharp scraper will compress wood a little, depending on the wood quality. This compressed wood will swell once the wood gets moistened in the finishing process, so a second or third scraping is usually required.
I find a newly sharpened scraper works best, and sharpen it frequently. I draw file the end of the scraper square, then stone the end smooth. I stone any burrs off the faces of the scraper. The result I want is sharp 90 degree corners on my scraper, without any raggedness to them. Then I set the scraper vertical in the vise, and burnish the corners over with about a 20 degree angle. This burnishing forms minute 'hooks' that really cut super fine shavings.
A scraper can be used for stock shaping after rasping, that's how effective at wood removal they can be.