the art of waffling includes the knowledge of highly insightful and highly specific keypoints of the subject matter, whereupon a small demonstration would constitute to everyone's admiration for your supposed learnedness. long quotes from masters of waffle are often the best for this.
overanalyse always - if they require you to understand the application of one reading to a text, learn fourteen, but again, learn only specific keypoints. for example, if they ask you about feminist reading, relate it to the rise of the female race during the 20th century, the burning of bras during the 60s and the acquisition of suffrage. show that the main protagonist in text relates to, or was influenced by a popular feminist, preferably, Virginia Woolf.
further, the art of waffling involves the use of highly-constructed language structures, such as the 'clause-upon-clause' technique. if something can be said using a simple sentence - DON'T - the english language is technical enough to paraphrase it into two past participles, five ablative-absolutes, two conditional clauses, one result clause, adjective subject adverb verb adjective object.
be PEDANTIC always!!!!
read waffle texts - examples of which include anything to do with rocket science, chemistry and physics textbooks (Macmillan Pathways is a good example), any higher-level Maths. examples of waffle in the english syllabus include any of the speeches, cloudstreet and anything with more than 500 pages.
...a waffling post about waffle...