WillMo
New member
- Joined
- Feb 15, 2026
- Messages
- 7
I need someone to talk me off the ledge here! My professor assigned a 10-12 page research paper on climate policy, and I'm currently on page 15... and I still haven't gotten to my third main argument! How did this happen?! I thought I was being thorough, but now I'm worried I've gone completely off track. The thing is, everything I'm including feels important. Every study, every statistic, every counterargument – it all seems relevant to building my case. But now I'm panicking about the word count. How long should a research paper actually be when you have a lot to say? Is there such a thing as "too thorough"?
I've heard some people say that professors secretly appreciate when you go a bit over because it shows engagement with the material. Others say strict page limits exist for a reason and going over just shows you can't edit yourself. Which is it?! I'm considering two approaches: 1) Trim ruthlessly and cut some of my favorite sections, or 2) Keep everything and hope the professor appreciates my passion. What would you do? Has anyone here gone over the limit and still gotten an A? I need success stories (or reality checks)! Please help!




I've heard some people say that professors secretly appreciate when you go a bit over because it shows engagement with the material. Others say strict page limits exist for a reason and going over just shows you can't edit yourself. Which is it?! I'm considering two approaches: 1) Trim ruthlessly and cut some of my favorite sections, or 2) Keep everything and hope the professor appreciates my passion. What would you do? Has anyone here gone over the limit and still gotten an A? I need success stories (or reality checks)! Please help!