Tips For Reading An Assignment Prompt
Tips For Reading An Assignment Prompt
Even if the instructor has introduced the assignment in class, make sure to read the
prompt on your own. You’d be surprised how often someone comes to the Writing
Center to ask for help on a paper before reading the prompt. Once they do read the
prompt, they often find that it answers many of their questions.
When you read the assignment prompt, you should do the following:
Unless the instructor has specified otherwise, most of your paper assignments at
Harvard will ask you to make an argument. So even when the assignment
instructions tell you to “discuss” or “consider,” your instructor generally expects
you to offer an arguable claim in the paper. For example, if you are asked to
“discuss” several proposals for reaching carbon neutral by 2050, your instructor
would likely not be asking you to list the proposals and summarize them;
instead, the goal would be to analyze them in relation to each other and offer
some sort of claim—either about the differences between the proposals, the
potential outcomes of following one rather than another, or something that has
been overlooked in all of the proposals. While you would need to summarize
those proposals in order to make a claim about them, it wouldn’t be enough just
to summarize them.
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If your instructor has told you not to consider sources outside of those specified
in the assignment, then you should follow that instruction. In those assignments,
the instructor wants to know what you think about the assigned sources and
about the question, and they do not want you to bring in other sources.
o If you’re writing a research paper, do not assume that your reader has read
all the sources that you are writing about. You’ll need to offer context about
what those sources say so that your reader can understand why you have
brought them into the conversation.
o If you’re writing only about assigned sources, you will still need to provide
enough context to orient the reader to the main ideas of the source. While you
may not need to summarize the entire text, you will need to give readers
enough information to follow your argument and understand what you are
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doing with the text. If you’re not sure whether you should assume that
readers are familiar with the ideas in the text, you should ask your instructor.
• Ask questions!
If you’re not sure what you’re supposed to do, email your instructor or go to
office hours and ask.