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.
· Beware of straying. Especially in the draft stage,
"discussion" and "analysis" can lead you from one
intrinsically interesting problem to another, then another, and then ... You
may wind up following a garden of forking paths and lose your way. To prevent
this, stop periodically while drafting your essay and reread the assignment.
Its purposes are likely to become clearer.
· Consider the assignment in relation to
previous and upcoming assignments. Ask yourself what is new about the task you're setting out to
do. Instructors often design assignments to build in complexity. Knowing where
an assignment falls in this progression can help you concentrate on the
specific, fresh challenges at hand.
Understanding some key words commonly used in
assignments also may simplify your task. Toward this end, let's take a look at
two seemingly impenetrable instructions: "discuss" and
"analyze."
1. Discuss the role
of gender in bringing about the French Revolution.
"Discuss" is easy to misunderstand
because the word calls to mind the oral/spoken dimension of communication.
"Discuss" suggests conversation, which often is casual and
undirected. In the context of an assignment, however, discussion entails
fulfilling a defined and organized task: to construct an argument that
considers and responds to an ample range of materials. To "discuss,"
in assignment language, means to make a broad argument about a set of arguments
you have studied. In the case above, you can do this by
·
pointing to
consistencies and inconsistencies in the evidence of gendered causes of the
Revolution;
·
raising the
implications of these consistencies and/or inconsistencies (perhaps they
suggest a limited role for gender as catalyst);
·
evaluating different
claims about the role of gender; and
·
asking what is gained
and what is lost by focusing on gendered symbols, icons and events.
A weak discussion essay in response to the
question above might simply list a few aspects of the Revolution—the image of
Liberty, the executions of the King and Marie Antoinette, the cry "Liberte,
Egalite, Fraternite!"—and make separate comments about how each, being
"gendered," is therefore a powerful political force. Such an essay
would offer no original thesis, but instead restate the question asked in the
assignment (i.e., "The role of gender was very important in the French
Revolution" or "Gender did not play a large role in the French
Revolution").
In
a strong discussion essay, the thesis would go beyond a basic restatement of
the assignment question. You might test the similarities and differences of the
revolutionary aspects being discussed. You might draw on fresh or unexpected
evidence, perhaps using as a source an intriguing reading that was only briefly
touched upon in lecture.
2. Analyze two of
Chaucer's Canterbury Tales, including one not discussed in class, as literary
works and in terms of sources/analogues.
The words "analyze" and
"analysis" may seem to denote highly advanced, even arcane skills,
possessed in virtual monopoly by mathematicians and scientists. Happily, the
terms refer to mental activity we all perform regularly; the terms just need
decoding. "Analyze" means two things in this specific assignment
prompt.
·
First, you need to
divide the two tales into parts, elements, or features. You might start with a
basic approach: looking at the beginning, middle, and end. These structural
features of literary works—and of historical events and many other subjects of
academic study—may seem simple or even simplistic, but they can yield
surprising insights when examined closely.
·
Alternatively, you
might begin at a more complex level of analysis. For example, you might search
for and distinguish between kinds of humor in the two tales and their sources
in Boccaccio or the Roman de la Rose: banter, wordplay, bawdy jokes, pranks,
burlesque, satire, etc.
·
Second, you need to
consider the two tales critically to arrive at some reward for having observed
how the tales are made and where they came from (their sources/analogues). In
the course of your essay, you might work your way to investigating Chaucer's
broader attitude toward his sources, which alternates between playful variation
and strict adherence. Your complex analysis of kinds of humor might reveal
differing conceptions of masculine and feminine between Chaucer and his
literary sources, or some other important cultural distinction.
Analysis
involves both a set of observations about the composition or workings of your
subject and a critical approach that keeps you from noticing just anything—from
excessive listing or summarizing—and instead leads you to construct an
interpretation, using textual evidence to support your ideas.
Some Final Advice
If, having read the assignment carefully,
you're still confused by it, don't hesitate to ask for clarification from your
instructor. He or she may be able to elucidate the question or to furnish some
sample responses to the assignment. Knowing the expectations of an assignment
can help when you're feeling puzzled. Conversely, knowing the boundaries can
head off trouble if you're contemplating an unorthodox approach. In either
case, before you go to your instructor, it's a good idea to list, underline or
circle the specific places in the assignment where the language makes you feel
uncertain.
Copyright 1998, William C. Rice, for the Writing Center at Harvard University.
Available online at https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/how-read-assignment.
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