SELECTED WRITING GUIDELINES
BEFORE YOU BEGIN WRITING:
- Read the assignment; answer the question!
- Make an outline to help you organize your
thoughts. While you are likely to deviate from your
outline, it provides a useful place to start.
- What are you trying to prove? All essays must make
an argument and attempt to convince the reader of that
argument. Tell your reader what your argument is in a thesis
statement.Your thesis does not have to be elaborate
-- it can come from the question itself. However, simply
describing events does not make a successful essay.
- Give examples and be specific. You may have an
excellent, sophisticated and innovative argument. But,
you have to support it with details, examples and extreme
clarity.
- Keep it simple. Variety in sentence structure and
vocabulary is useful, but not at the expense of clarity
or grammar.
- Proofread. Spell-checking is not sufficient.
- Do not be too ambitious. The scope of your paper
and its level of detail should match the size of the
task. Do not try to write a book in 5 pages or to
fill 5 pages with 1 page worth of substantive content.
STRUCTURE OF PAPER:
Introduction
- State your topic and thesis.
In all papers for this class, underline your thesis
statement.
- Describe sources and methods.
- Anticipate conclusion.
Body:
- Develop the topic and support the thesis presented in the
introduction.
- Discuss the material (i.e.; your data) and methodology
that you use to support your thesis. Include in this
discussion: why this is a good source of information for
your work, and the limitations of the data and/or
methodology.
- Write up your findings, supported by graphs and tables
where appropriate. Each topic should be a separate
paragraph.
- Your presentation should develop your findings one at a
time, in a logical sequence.
Conclusion:
- Restate (but do not re-copy) your thesis, and tell the
reader how you have supported your argument.
Use Turabian, A Manual for Writers of Term Papers...,
as a guide for writing structure, style and form. Your footnotes
and bibliography should follow the formats provided by Turabian.
Whatever format you use, use it consistently. All sources for
data and ideas, and all quotations, are to be clearly cited. The
line between sloppy writing and plagiarism is very thin.
(However, the results are different. Sloppy writing earns a bad
grade. Plagiarism can be a reason for dismissal from the
university.)
SOME POINTERS
- Devote space and attention to your points in relative
proportion to their importance to your argument. Do not
spend too much space on trivial points; and do not gloss
over important issues. If an issue seems important, and
you have trouble supporting it, then you might re-think
your argument it may be wrong or inconsistent.
- Pay very close attention to logical consistency in your
writing. Some examples of inconsistencies:
- "Restrictions and regulations oppressed
slaves, even after the abolition of
slavery."
- After the abolition of slavery, nobody was a
"slave." Restrictions may have
oppressed former slaves and their
descendants, but they no longer oppressed slaves.
- "Cities on the coast became major port
cities."
- Cities not on a coast would have
difficulties becoming port cities, major
or otherwise.
- Grammar needs to be correct. Some common
problems are:
- Maintain agreement of voice, tense, number and
gender.
- Voice: do not switch between
"person" of pronouns; such as
sometimes using "he" and
sometimes "you." (I generally
find it better to avoid writing in the
second person, unless you are addressing
the reader directly.)
- Tense: Unless you have a very
specific and precise reason, do not
switch between the past, present and
future tenses. (The future tense is
seldom appropriate in writing a history
paper.)
- Number: If the subject of your
sentence is plural, so should the verb be
plural. A singular subject requires a
verb in the singular. Modifiers should be
of the same number as what they modify.
- Gender: Use the appropriate gender
of pronoun for gendered subjects.
Ungendered subjects receive ungendered
pronouns. (Specifically, countries are
not female.)
- Do not have run-on or incomplete sentences. One
sentence should convey one complete thought.
Sentences should follow in logical sequence.
- Be careful and parsimonious in your use of
pronouns. When you use pronouns, the reader
should have no confusion about its reference.
Impersonal pronouns ("it,"
"this," "those," etc.
used as pronouns, rather than adjectives
should seldom be subjects of sentences or
clauses.
- Minimize your use of the passive voice in verb
structure (also of unnecessary compound tenses).
Some examples:
- Passive: The pen was put on the
table by John.
- Active: John put the pen on the
table.
- Passive: The agreement had been
implemented by the time of the coup.
- Active: All parties implemented
the agreement before the coup
Remember that beginning sentences
with "There is/was [any form
of the verb to
be]" or "It [form
of to be]" is an
especially sloppy form of the
passive voice.
- Avoid redundancy.
- Avoid colloquialisms (slang).
- PROOF-READ your paper. Spelling and grammar will
affect your grade. Remember, the items above are not
exhaustive. If you have questions, consult a text in
writing or grammar, or see me before you turn in
your paper.