Learning from instructor comments

Instructor comments on any work that you have done can help you identify mistakes, particularly ones that you make repeatedly, and can point you toward larger issues that prevent your writing from being as effective as it could be. Whether or not you will have an opportunity to revise a particular piece of writing, you should look closely at the comments from your instructor.

In responding to student writing, however, instructors will sometimes use phrases or comments that are a kind of shorthand—comments that are perfectly clear to the instructor but may be less clear to the students reading them. The instructor comments in this chart, culled from more than a thousand first-year student essays, are among those that you may find most puzzling. If your paper includes a puzzling comment that is not listed here, be sure to ask your instructor what the comment means and how you can fix the problem.

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Instructor Comment Actions to Take in Response

“thesis not clear”

Make sure that you have a main point, and state it directly. The rest of the paper will need to support the main point, too—this problem cannot be corrected by adding a sentence or two.

“trying to do too much”

“covers too much ground”

Focus your main point more narrowly so that you can say everything that you need to in a project of the assigned length. You may need to cut back on some material and then expand what remains.

“hard to follow”

“not logical”

“incoherent”

“jumps around”

“parts not connected”

“transition”

If overall organization is unclear, try mapping or outlining and rearranging your work. See if transitions and signals or additional explanation will solve the problem.

“too general”

“vague”

Use concrete language and details, and make sure that you have something specific and interesting to say. If not, reconsider your topic.

“underdeveloped”

“thin”

“sparse”

Add examples and details, and be as specific as possible. You may need to do more research.

“what about the opposition?”

“one-sided”

“counterarguments?”

Add information on why some people disagree with you, and represent their views fairly and completely before you refute them. Recognize that reasonable people may hold views that differ from yours.

“repetitive”

“you’ve already said this”

Revise any parts of your writing that repeat an argument, point, word, or phrase; avoid using the same evidence over and over.

“awk”

“awkward”

Ask a peer or your instructor for suggestions about revising awkward sentences.

“syntax”

“awkward syntax”

“convoluted”

Read the sentence aloud to identify the problem; revise or replace the sentence.

“unclear”

Find another way to explain what you mean; add any background information or examples that your audience may need to follow your reasoning.

“tone too conversational”

“not an academic voice”

“too informal”

“colloquial”

“slang”

Look for overly informal words and phrasing you can revise. Consider your audience, and revise material that addresses or refers to that group too familiarly or informally.

“pompous”

“stilted”

“stiff”

Make sure you understand the connotations of the words you use, and revise any that contribute to a pompous, excessively old-fashioned, or inappropriate tone.

“set up quotation”

“integrate quotation”

Read the sentence containing the quotation aloud; revise it if it does not make sense as a sentence. Introduce every quotation with information about the source. Explain each quotation’s importance to your work.

“your words?”

“source?”

“cite”

Mark all quotations clearly. Cite paraphrases and summaries of others’ ideas. Give credit for help from others, and remember that you are responsible for your own work.

“doc”

Check the citations to be sure that you include all of the required information, that you punctuate correctly, and that you omit information not required by the documentation style.

Storyboard on getting help from peer reviewers

Video Prompt: Lessons from peer review