- Read the assignment: Really read it. Take half an hour and read it in detail, taking notes, highlighting things, and writing down any questions you have. Don’t wait until the night before to realize you have some serious questions to bring to your TA, and don’t lose marks on your margins being the wrong size!
- Make a plan: Some people work better under a bit of a time crunch, and some people need to start assignments weeks in advance. There’s no problem with either approach if it works for you, but you should still always start with a writing out a strategy for how you are going to finish the assignment and what it’s going to look like (an outline).
Words. Words that form a thesis statement. More words, separated into paragraphs. Further words. In conclusion, words.
When I start a new paper, the first thing I type looks something like the above, or, more often, a string of frustrated nothing. Something like: askljaldjsadieruhejbrjnfgmkngfkgkfkgslmsdgkmdskmf.
Starting to write is tough. Identifying the right moment to turn your zillions of tabs of research, piles of books, and pages of notes into your paper is always a challenge - and despite your preparedness to go, you’ll always be flipping through some book mid-essay trying desperately to find that one line you wish you had saved the page of.
It’s always good, in either case, to start off with two really simple, obvious things that people rarely think to do:
0 comments on “Put title of blog post here (or: the perils of writing)”