Jimmy Cox
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Articles by this Author
How Should You Prepare To Write?
- By Jimmy Cox
- Published 04/23/2008
- Non-Fiction
- Unrated
Words destined to be well-remembered are not poured out. They are the products of thought, effort, and planning.
In some courses, especially in your senior year, you may be asked to submit long pieces of writing that may be loosely classified as term papers or research reports. Typical among these are studies of an author's characteristics or surveys of literary movements in honor English classes or analyses in depth of various topics in your science or social studies courses.
There are those who say that the art of letter writing is fast disappearing. Fortunately for those who worry about our writing habits, the situation is not desperate yet. Mountains of mail still go out of and come in to homes, offices, and stores every day, and a great many of the letters are not prefabricated messages
To write well you must learn to use language tricks that can add to your writing the color, style, and appeal you want it to have. The five suggestions that follow have been called tricks because they work like magic to lift your composition out of the dull and the routine.
The home and the school working together can make immeasurable strides in both how to write and what to write. The parent and the child can together generate a natural and lasting desire for correctness and neatness.
With these simple questions provided in this article as your basis, you will be able to generate any number of great ideas. No writing will ever be a problem again!
Below are some tips on how you can write better student compositions. Choosing the right topic will get you off on the right foot.
Thirty years ago the very idea that analyzing handwriting was anything else but an adjunct to fortune telling was not even thought of. Books on psychology scoffed at the idea of a handwriting specimen revealing anything about a writer, other than whether he or she could write legibly.
