why the style of writing one is like this only why
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Answer:
The purpose of academic writing, as with most other kinds of writing, is to communicate. For you, as a student, your writing is the marker's only window to your thoughts. Therefore it is important that you learn how best to write in a way which will convince the marker that you understand what you are talking about.
I am not so certain anyone can say there is a bad style of writing i think everyone's style of writong is good and personal and no one shud ever be discouraged from writing what they want to write I think I am a good writer but even I had to start from somewhere I am currently working on a book and I think it is going well but I noticed I have gotten better at writing as I have written and…
… Okay, I think you get the point. There certainly are “bad” ways to write, and I tried to demonstrate a few problems I've seen.
No focus. Writer, in the same paragraph, includes multiple ideas only loosely tied together, without transition from paragraph to paragraph.
Improper punctuation / grammar. We have it for a reason. It makes it easier to read and understand. If you have a massive block “sentence,” if it can be called such, like I put up above, it is unintelligible to most people, and the reader often doesn't even realize they aren't communicating; sometimes some things can be worked around (improper their, there, they're), but the way I wrote that entire block above makes it almost impossible to read!
Bad spelling. In modern times most programs have spellcheckers and autocorrect (I had to try to spell words wrong) some people still mess this up. I do too sometimes, but some people seem practiced at it.
No diversity. Starting every sentence the same way, or worse, with the same words (“I think,” “I think,” “I think,”) gets boring and clunky. Sometimes this can be skillfully used to make a point, but too many people use it as a matter of course.
180s. Contradicting oneself or flipping subjects suddenly - I've seen a lot of people try to drive subject matter towards themselves at times when it wasn't warranted - can give a reader proverbial whiplash.
Forgetting tense. If you're writing, keep your tense - past, present, future— in sync. Obviously there must be some mixing as you will refer to what did happen and what will or is expected, but keep tense alike in the main body.
Plagiarism. If you do this, go die in a fire. That being said, if you copy someone else's work but never share it, it can actually be a great learning experience; I've heard of a number of great authors do this - straight up sit down and type out, word for word, someone else's work… and then delete what they typed. It gets your mindset in tune with the style they write in.
Now, you may have meant instead a general style, like 1st person, 3rd person limited or 3rd person omniscient, to which I'd say there is no “bad” writing style, but some people mix these, which is clunky, and some do not write in a style that is best for themselves as an author. If you have a hard time describing emotion, don't go for 1st person. If you have a hard time with detail, don't go for 3rd person omniscient.