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3.4: Narrowing Your Thinking

  • Page ID
    223034
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    Moving from a broad subject to a workable portion of it

    Students are often given a broad assignment or subject area to write about, such as “addiction” or “identity.” But where do you go from there? Well, the prewriting techniques in the previous section should help you a bit. If your topic is “identity,” but you aren’t sure how to approach this as a paper assignment, use your questions, your mind-map, or your list to see which areas you may feel more competent writing about. Remember that an academic paper is usually not a book report, which just tells what happens in a story, but instead a paper that expresses an opinion about what you’ve read. Your opinion does not need to be controversial, of course. It just needs to be supportable with examples and details you can provide.

    Start with the general area—the subject—and move to a smaller section of that area. For instance, if your subject is identity, you could narrow that down to an opinion about how a person’s identity is formed. Is it entirely inborn, or does a person’s upbringing and environment contribute?

    See this page from the KU Writing Center for more ideas on narrowing a topic.


    3.4: Narrowing Your Thinking is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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