Professors' Guide to Getting Good Grades in College Professors' Guide to Getting Good Grades in College Professors' Guide to Getting Good Grades in College Collins - An Imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers to be published June 27th, 2006 ABOUT THE BOOK MEET THE AUTHORS MEET THE AUTHORS BUY THE BOOK
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chapter 13

Top 10 Tips for Constructing the Perfect Paper

If you've followed our method so far, you're well on your way to writing the perfect paper. You've understood exactly what the paper assignment is asking and what kind of paper you're supposed to be producing. You've done the analysis and/or the research, you've made a trip (or two) to the professor and incorporated his or her comments into your thinking. And now the moment of truth has arrived. It's time to polish up your work and take your final steps to that A paper. Time to make sure that the product you create -- the paper that the professor is going to spend about 15 minutes reading through -- is a worthy reflection of all the weeks of effort you've invested in thinking about the issue. Don't cut a corner here. At the grade junction. Have a look at our top 10 tips for constructing the A+ paper...

TIP # 1: Get Right to the Point

A great paper needs to get off to a great start. Don’t plan to ease into the paper topic with a long introduction (unless otherwise instructed). The professor doesn’t want to hear general background information, or how the assigned topic is interesting but difficult, or what thought processes you went through while writing the paper. Professors don’t want to suffer through elaborate stage setting, whether it takes the form of flowery opening paragraphs or ridiculously basic ones.

Professors want to see your answer ASAP. Like the hungry diner, they want to get to the meat and potatoes right away. So the introduction to your paper needs to be short. It needs to tell the reader what you are going to do and how you are going to do it. It needs to include only the materials relevant to the task at hand. Begin to answer the question in the very first sentence....

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