The Most Clever Essay Hacks You Know You Used In School Writing an academic paper can be hard. There's a set word count to abide by and a page limit to follow—and obviously a lot of research and writing that goes into it. But, some slick students have tried using clever hacks that make the overall process a little less grueling. Here are some of the most crafty (and downright ridiculous) tricks students have used when turning in a research paper.
Filler quotes
When you write a paper, you like to sprinkle random quotes from that classic you read in English class throughout your essay. Yes, this helps fill up the page, but you also think it's pretty cool to tie The Great Gatsby with say, the chemistry reference table . . . your teacher will have to be impressed with your clever effort, right?
Using big words
Everyday words are for your fellow classmates. You shoot to impress the teacher with your vocabulary skills by using terms others don't . . . and ones that are a lot longer (did someone say, sesquipedali an?). Sure, you could simply say something is valueless, but why do that when you can use the word floccinaucinihilipilification . . right?
Adding a long header
Instead of simply adding your name, date, and class title to the header of your page, you provide unnecessary additions to give it more bulk. For example, you also add your age, physical description, address, social-media handles, or anything that you think is relevant . . . your teacher needs to know this paper is yours after all.
And, nothing exemplifies organization quite like a proper footer, don't you think? That's what you tell your teacher when you add a footer with page numbers to your essay . . . even if you're well aware it also increases the overall length, too.
Larger font
Times New Roman is usually the go-to font for just about every academic paper, but you have your ways of working around that. You make a subtle change by switching it up to something larger like Bookman Old Style for a meatier appeal that you're almost positive no one will notice . . . even a teacher with a ruler as a sidekick.
And, if you may not be able to increase the font size of your essay (see: pesky teacher with ruler sidekick), that won't stop you from making your punctuation bigger. Rather than keeping your commas and periods at 12 pt., you amp up the size to 14 pt., hopeful the teacher doesn't notice your punctuation is on some serious steroids.
Paraphrasing
After you insert a quote into your document, you immediately follow up by paraphrasing it. You like to give your own interpretation to what the quote is about (no matter how straightforward it is to the reader) to show you get it—and, you know, to add a few extra pages to the mix.
Increase line spacing
As an alternative to keeping your paper double-spaced (which is usually the standard for an essay), you adjust the line spacing ever so slightly to increase the length. You prefer to work with 2.1 spacing that can tack on almost an extra page . . . leaving you with the recommended page count without all the work.
Adjusting margins
You're all about playing around with margins (but only the right ones since papers are usually left justified). Instead of keeping the right side at 1 inch, you decrease it to .75, reducing the space on the page (causing it to be more narrow with less space to take up) while resulting in more pages. Ah, computer hacks 101.
Adding extra spaces after periods
You know the standard spacing requirement after punctuation is one space, but that doesn’t stop you from doubling it when needed. And, when you’re looking to fill up 12 pages and only have 11, there’s no way you won’t be adding two spaces after a period instead of one.via GIPHY