an essay in which you explain what you have learned about your topic
an expanded essay that presents a research question and thesis doing the research writing the paper and correctly documenting your sources essay leads you into the works of others and asks you to compare their thoughts with your own
an expanded essay that presents your own interpretation or evaluation or argument
an extended essay (eight to twenty-five
an in-depth presentation about a person, event, or other historical subject, including a factual narrative about the topic and an analysis of its significance
an investigative, written report, based on information
a piece college level and of course the more you write
a piece of academic writing that requires a more abstract, critical, and thoughtful level of inquiry than you might be used to
a piece of academic writing that requires a more abstract, "others," to support the topic you have been given or chosen to explore
a piece of expository writing which presents the results of a careful investigation of some chosen topic
a piece of that facts, data, and other information on a specific topic
a piece of writing that reports facts, data
a writing project in which you choose a topic related to the course, go about what you have read
a written report based upon careful investigation of information from a variety of resources