Find out all the ways in which college writing is "something different" by reading the provocative essay "Writing in College," by Joseph M. Williams and Lawrence McEnerney.
Here are a few other suggestions that we've culled from other sites and from our own experience:
That’s the first of a dozen suggestions in the University of Illinois Writing Techniques Handbook (maintained by Steve Lamos). Here are some others.
After reading the assignment (you should do so immediately, asking any questions you have), "ask yourself a few basic questions as you read, and jot down the answers on the assignment.
If this brief excerpt whets your appetite, you’ll find much more that is useful in the complete essay from the UNC Chapel Hill Writing Center, 18 Oct 2000]
"You should consider your audience when choosing:
Find our more about your audience by reading the complete essay from the University of Illinois, Writing Techniques Handbook.
"A common problem of beginning writers is wallowing around in a topic too wide for their purposes. General words
such as 'media,' 'war,' 'life,' or 'nature' are often incorrectly used as if they were topics (even 'dragons' is too broad).
However, students often begin to write essays with nothing more in mind than a general concept, and the result is a
vague and generalized essay, of little interest to the student and less to the instructor. If you start with a broad area,
concentrate on narrowing your subject, it will also help you deal with your topic within the length of the paper assigned
and the time you have been given to complete it."
For helpful advice (and some interesting examples!) on how to narrow down your topic , read the entire selection from the
University of Victoria Writer's Guide.
For many assignments, your professor will provide you with a list of supplemental texts. This sort of
list is, in all likelihood, the best place to start browsing.
But it is sometimes fun, useful - and good training, as well - to research an issue yourself using the internet:
For more help on constructing thesis statements read the complete essay from the UNC Writing Center.
The George Mason University Writing Center gives some sample thesis statements:
One of the many types of effective introductions for an essay: the funnel paragraph:
Example:
But isn't one person's mistake another's standard usage?
BAD:The so-called "right to bear arms" is a bunch of crap.
Better: While revered as truth by many Americans for decades, the Constitutional "right to bear arms" has
in fact been misinterpreted..
"According to the linguistic school currently on top, human beings are all born with a genetic
endowment for recognizing and formulating language. This must mean that we possess genes
for all kinds of information, with strands of special, peculiarly human DNA for the discernment
of meaning in syntax. We must imagine the morphogenesis of deep structures, built into our
minds, for coding out, like proteins, the parts of speech. Correct grammar (correct in the logical,
not fashionable, sense) is as much a biologic characteristic of our species as feathers on birds."
-- Lewis Thomas, "How We Process Information"
[Read the complete essay from the George Mason University Writing Center]
[Read the complete essay from the University of North Carolina Writing Lab]
Often enough, but if your standard usage causes other people to consider you stupid or ignorant,
you may want to consider changing it. You have the right to express yourself in any manner you please,
but if you wish to communicate effectively, you should use nonstandard English only when you intend to
rather than fall into it because you don't know any better.
. . . . "
[Read the complete essay from Prof Paul Brian's website at Washington State University ]