Start with the brief, not the topic
The highest-scoring academic submissions usually begin with a close reading of the assignment brief. Before drafting, identify the action verbs, required scope, marking criteria, word count, citation style, and any required course concepts.
- Underline command words such as analyse, evaluate, compare, justify, or recommend.
- Convert each rubric criterion into a checklist item.
- Separate what the question asks from what you personally want to discuss.
Build one controlling argument
A strong paper has a clear central claim. Every paragraph should move that claim forward rather than simply summarising sources. The argument should be specific enough to guide structure and broad enough to cover the whole assignment.
- Use the introduction to define your position and scope.
- Make each body paragraph prove one part of the argument.
- Avoid paragraphs that only describe a source without interpreting it.
Use evidence as support, not decoration
Sources should be selected because they strengthen the reasoning. Effective academic writing introduces evidence, explains its relevance, and connects it back to the claim instead of dropping citations into isolated sentences.
Edit for structure before grammar
A polished submission needs both strong ideas and clean presentation. However, structural editing should come before grammar editing because a grammatically clean paper can still lose marks if it does not answer the brief.
Common questions
What makes academic writing different from general writing?
Academic writing is more structured, evidence-based, formal, and argument-driven. It must respond to a specific task, use credible sources, and follow the required citation style.
Can an academic paper be clear without sounding simplistic?
Yes. Strong academic writing is precise rather than overly complicated. Clear structure, disciplined word choice, and well-explained evidence often create a stronger scholarly voice than inflated language.

