I just got my first paper back, and ouch. The grade was okay (a B-), but the feedback stung: "This reads like a debate speech. Expository writing requires neutrality." I thought I was just being passionate about the decline of local journalism, but apparently, my passion comes off as bias.
The thing is, I find it so hard to just present information without wanting to convince the reader that my interpretation is the right one. How do you separate the facts from your own opinion on them? My professor said to let the evidence do the talking, but doesn't selecting the evidence already show my bias? I'm genuinely confused about where the line is between a strong thesis and a biased agenda.
Is it just about word choice, or do I need to fundamentally change how I approach research?
The thing is, I find it so hard to just present information without wanting to convince the reader that my interpretation is the right one. How do you separate the facts from your own opinion on them? My professor said to let the evidence do the talking, but doesn't selecting the evidence already show my bias? I'm genuinely confused about where the line is between a strong thesis and a biased agenda.
Is it just about word choice, or do I need to fundamentally change how I approach research?