Remember the Target of your Writing Assignment
Writing may have many various targets. Here are some writing advice-patterns:
1. Summarizing: Introducing the key points or core of another text in a brief form.
2. Persuading or arguing: Expressing a point of view on a topic in an attempt to persuade other people that your opinion is accurate.
3. Narrating: Narrating a story or providing a number of events.
4. Evaluating: Investigating something to define its worth or value grounded on a collection of criteria.
5. Analyzing: Dividing a topic into its parts for examining the relationships between its parts.
6. Replying: Writing in a dialogue with another text.
7. Investigating or examining: Thoroughly questioning a topic in order to uncover or discover facts, which are not broadly accepted or known, in a way striving to be as objective and neutral as possible.
8. Observing: Assisting the reader to see and recognize a person, object, place, event, and image that you have experienced or watched through minute sensory descriptions.
You might be observing your dormitory cafeteria to understand what sorts of food students actually eat, you might be reckoning up the food quality grounded on quantity and freshness, or you might be telling a story about the way you got fifteen pounds while being a first-year student at college.
You can need to utilize some of these writing advice-patterns in your paper. For instance, you could use the first writing advice-pattern to sum up federal nutrition guidelines, estimate if the food being cooked at the dormitory suits those guidelines, and argue that alterations must be made in its menus to fit better those guidelines.

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