Jumping Straight Into Answering a
Question without Proper Planning:
You read a question and you know the answer. Do you immediately raise
your pen or pencil and start writing away? If yes, how many times have you
encountered the following scenarios?
- You are halfway
through your answer and then you realise that your answer is wrong!
- You are penning a
new paragraph when you realise that it should have come before a previous
paragraph!
- You are halfway
through a point you are trying to make before you realise that you have
already written it in a previous paragraph!
- You are writing
about a new idea and then you realise that it should have been discussed
together with another idea that you have already written!
- You realise you
have left out an important point in a previous paragraph but there is no
space for you to insert it! Therefore, you are forced to write this point
in the margin of the paper or somewhere away from the paragraph. Then you
draw a long line to connect this sentence to the paragraph.
- You have finished
the answer but realise that the paragraphs need to be rearranged!
Therefore, you resort to numbering the first paragraph as (1), the second
paragraph as (5), the third paragraph as (2), and so on so forth.
If you have encountered any of the above scenarios, and are still
running into such situations, would you want to avoid them in future?
The solution to the above problems is proper planning. Proper planning
ensures that you have considered all the major aspects of the question before
you start to write your answer. It would save you much time later when you
write the answer. A carefully planned answer would also get more marks than an
unplanned or poorly planned answer.
Below are the suggested steps in planning an answer to a question:
- Always spend a
minute or two thinking through a question.
- Underline the key
words in the question and ask yourself what kind of answer the question
demands.
- Make quick notes in
point form as you brainstorm for all the relevant points and ideas that
come to your mind.
- Group all the
related points and ideas together into main ideas.
- Ask yourself
whether you have enough main ideas. A long question typically requires at
least three main ideas in its answer.
- Ask yourself
whether you have too many or too few points for a particular main idea.
- If more than half
of your answer is about one main idea only, while the other main ideas
make up the rest of your answer, you are most likely paying unequal
attention to each main idea and your answer will be lopsided.
- Finally, plan how
you wish to approach the question and structure your answer accordingly.
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