Assignments usually ask you to demonstrate that you have immersed yourself in the course material and that you've done some thinking on your own; questions not treated at length in class often serve as assignments. Fortunately, if you've put the time into getting to know the material, then you've almost certainly begun thinking independently. In responding to assignments, keep in mind the following advice.
This site will provide guidance to students starting on any type of assignment. Assignments need to be approached with clear thought and interpretation to what the goal of the assignment is in the classroom.
Classroom Pages
▼
Pages
▼
Pages
▼
FAQs
▼
▼
Getting Started
▼
You Must...
▼
Readings and Sources
▼
Improve Your Grades
▼
How to...
▼
Tutorials
▼
Technical Writing Pages
▼
Literature Pages
▼
Getting "up-to-speed" as a College Student
▼
Procrastination Pages
▼
Procrastination
▼
Most Used
▼
Tuesday, November 13, 2018
Understand How to Move from Assignment to Topic
Moving from Assignment to Topic
At one point or other, the academic essay manages to intimidate most student writers. Sometimes, we may even experience what is commonly called writer's block—that awful experience of staring at an assignment, reading it over and over, yet being unable to proceed, to find a way into it. But the process of writing the academic essay involves a series of manageable steps. Keeping this in mind can help you work through the anxiety you may at first feel. If you find yourself "clueless" about beginning an essay, it may be because you have skipped an important step. You may be trying to come up with a thesis before finding and narrowing your topic.
