How To Write An Essay
How To Write An Essay
How To Write An Essay
Write something to suit yourself and many people will like it; write
something to suit everybody and scarcely anyone will care for it.
-- Jesse Stuart
Below are brief summaries of each of the ten steps to writing an essay.
Select the links for more info on any particular step, or use the blue
navigation bar on the left to proceed through the writing steps. How To
Write an Essay can be viewed sequentially, as if going through ten
sequential steps in an essay writing process, or can be explored by
individual topic.
2. Analysis: Now that you have a good knowledge base, start analyzing the
arguments of the essays you're reading. Clearly define the claims, write out
the reasons, the evidence. Look for weaknesses of logic, and also
strengths. Learning how to write an essay begins by learning how to
analyze essays written by others.
3. Brainstorming: Your essay will
require insight of your own, genuine
essay-writing brilliance. Ask yourself
a dozen questions and answer
them. Meditate with a pen in your
hand. Take walks and think and
think until you come up with original
insights to write about.
5. Outline: Sketch out your essay before straightway writing it out. Use one-
line sentences to describe paragraphs, and bullet points to describe what
each paragraph will contain. Play with the essay's order. Map out the
structure of your argument, and make sure each paragraph is unified.
6. Introduction: Now sit down and write the essay. The introduction should
grab the reader's attention, set up the issue, and lead in to your thesis.
Your intro is merely a buildup of the issue, a stage of bringing your reader
into the essay's argument.
(Note: The title and first paragraph are probably the most important
elements in your essay. This is an essay-writing point that doesn't always
sink in within the context of the classroom. In the first paragraph you either
hook the reader's interest or lose it. Of course your teacher, who's getting
paid to teach you how to write an essay, will read the essay you've written
regardless, but in the real world, readers make up their minds about
whether or not to read your essay by glancing at the title alone.)
9. MLA Style: Format your essay according to the correct guidelines for
citation. All borrowed ideas and quotations should be correctly cited in the
body of your text, followed up with a Works Cited (references) page listing
the details of your sources.
10. Language: You're not done writing your essay until you've polished
your language by correcting the grammar, making sentences flow,
incoporating rhythm, emphasis, adjusting the formality, giving it a level-
headed tone, and making other intuitive edits. Proofread until it reads just
how you want it to sound. Writing an essay can be tedious, but you don't
want to bungle the hours of conceptual work you've put into writing your
essay by leaving a few slippy misppallings and pourly wordedd phrazies..
You're done. Great job. Now move over Ernest Hemingway — a new writer
is coming of age! (Of course Hemingway was a fiction writer, not an essay
writer, but he probably knew how to write an essay just as well.)
My Promise: The Rest of This Site Will Really Teach You How To Write
an Essay
For half a dozen years I've read thousands of college essays and taught students
how to write essays, do research, analyze arguments, and so on. I wrote this site in
the most basic, practical way possible and made the instruction crystal clear for
students and instructors to follow. If you carefully follow the ten steps for writing an
essay as outlined on this site — honestly and carefully follow them — you'll learn
how to write an essay that is more organized, insightful, and appealing. And you'll
probably get an A.
Now it's time to really begin. C'mon, it will be fun. I promise to walk you
through each step of your writing journey.
LEXIS-NEXIS
JSTOR
ERIC (EBSCOHost)
Oxford English Dictionary
Project Muse
Sociological Abstracts
WorldCat
As you research your topic, you will naturally be analyzing the arguments of
different authors. In contrast to more popular reading, in the academic
world, authors must supply copious amounts of evidence and nuanced
reasoning in order persuade other scholars of their ideas. To enter the
scholar's "gladiator arena," you will need to understand the principles of
argument. Both analyzing an argument and coming up with your own will
require careful thought.
When analyzing an argument of any text, or creating one of your own, first
identify the main claim and then locate all the reasons for it. The claim is
the controversial, debatable assertion of the essay, while the reasons offer
the explanations and evidence of why the claim is true. It is helpful to map
this reasoning out:
CLAIM = ________________________________________
Reason 1: ____________________________
Reason 2: ____________________________
Reason 3: ____________________________
Once you have the argument mapped out, assess the reasoning. Ask
yourself the following questions to help you identify weaknesses of logic:
(2.) Is the evidence presented sufficient? Evidence refers to the support given
for a claim. This support may be in the form of facts, statistics, authoritative
quotations, studies, observations, experiences, research, or other forms of proof.
Example: "John was late because he has Alzheimer's disease, and
according to the American Medical Association, Alzheimer's patients
frequently forgot who and where they are" (Jones 65). (The writer has
given evidence in the form of research for his or her reasoning.)
(3.) What assumptions do the reasons rest on? An assumption is what one
takes for granted to be true, but which actually may not be true. All
arguments rest on some common assumptions. This common ground
makes it possible for two people to have a dialogue in the first place, but
these assumptions, because they are based on groundless ideas, make for
a "sweet spot" of attack in argument.
Example: "John was late because his previous class is on the far side
of campus." (The assumption is that it takes a long time to get from
the far side of campus to class. If John walked the same speed as
the one presenting the argument, the assumption would be a shared
one. However, it may be the case that John actually walks much
faster than assumed, and that he was late for another reason.)
(4.) Does the writer commit any logical fallacies? Fallacies are commonly
committed errors of reasoning. Being aware of these fallacies will help you
see them more abundantly in the texts you read. Although there are
probably at least a hundred different fallacies, the following six are the most
common:
Practice with Analysis (Reasoning)
Instructions
The following examples are from Anne Thomson's Critical Reasoning. Each
of the passages contains weak reasoning. After identifying the argument,
consider what alternative explanations or reasons might also be possible.
Only click on answer after struggling with the question for a good period of
time.
1. Men are generally better than women at what psychologists call 'target
directed motor skills', but what the rest of us call 'playing darts.' Many
people would say that this is not due to innate biological differences in the
brain, but is due to the fact that upbringing gives boys more opportunities to
practise these skills. But there must be some innate difference, because
even three-year-old boys are better than girls of the same age at target
skills.
Answer
2. Allowing parents to choose the sex of their children could have serious
social costs. There would be a higher percentage of males who were
unable to find a female partner. Also, since it is true that 90 per cent of
violent crimes are committed by men, the number of violent crimes would
rise.
Answer
3. When people live in a house for a long period of time, they develop a
strong commitment to the local neighbourhood. So the continued fall in
house prices may have a beneficial effect. The middle classes will become
enthusiast campaigners for better schools, and against vandalism, traffic
congestion and noisy neighbors.
Answer
4. If the money has been stolen, someone must have disabled the alarm
system, because the alarm easily wakes me if it goes off. So the culprit
must be a member of the security firm which installed the alarm.
Answer
Answer
6. There is a much higher incidence of heart attack and death from heart
disease among heavy cigarette smokers than among people who do not
smoke. It has been thought that nicotine was responsible for the
development of atherosclerotic disease in smokers. It now seems that the
real culprit is carbon monoxide. In experiments, animals exposed to carbon
monoxide for several months show changes in the arterial walls that are
indistinguishable from atherosclerosis.
Answer
7. Patients on the point of death, who either died shortly afterwards or were
revived, have often reported visions of places of exquisite beauty, intense
feelings of peace and joy, and encounters with loved ones who had
predeceased them. These experiences clearly suggest that there is life
after death. Skeptics often claim that such phenomena resemble certain
altered states of consciousness that can be induced by drugs or organic
brain disease. This objection fails, however, because most of the patients
whose experiences of this nature have been reported were neither drugged
nor suffering from brain disease.
Answer
8. The growth in the urban population of the USA has put increasing
pressure on farmers to produce more food. Farmers have responded by
adopting labour-saving technology that has resulted in a further
displacement of population to cities. As a result, the farm population,
formerly a dominant pressure group in national politics, has lost political
power.
Answer
9. Human being shave the power either to preserve or to destroy wild plant
species. Most of the wonder drugs of the past fifty years have come from
wild plants. If those plants had not existed, medicine could not have
progressed as it has, and many human lives would have been lost. It is
therefore important for the future of medicine that we should preserve wild
plant species.
Answer
10. Thirty years ago the numbers of British people taking holidays in foreign
countries were very small compared with the large numbers of them
traveling abroad for the holidays now. Foreign travel is, and always has
been, expensive. So British people must on average have more money to
spend now than they did thirty years ago.
Answer
Sample Outline
The following is a sample outline one might write of an essay comparing
the logical and rhetorical effectiveness of two contrasting texts. The Roman
numerals refer to paragraphs ("I" is paragraph one, "II" is paragraph two,
and so on).The bullets refer to points to be covered within that paragraph.
Notice how each of the headers and bullets makes the point in a
condensed, brief way. Also, each bulleted point develops the focus (in bold)
of that paragraph. The four topics announced in the thesis are carried
through in each paragraph. Finally, the entire outline fits on one page.
Reading
Reading is the only real way to learn to
write well. As you read page after page
of exquisitely written prose, you will
naturally incorporate the same style,
rhythm, and grammar into your own
writing. We learn to speak in much the
same way. What should you read? The
classics, of course, beginning with Homer and then Chaucer and
Shakespeare and Milton, etc. However, if you want some lighter,
more fun reading, try these online links:
Snopes. Urban legend site telling you the truth about a host of
unreliable stories you may have heard.
Do you have a favorite site you read? Send me the link and I may
put it on this reading list.
Tom Johnson. tjohnson@aucegypt.edu. Last updated May 2004.
Margins
Page margins should be one inch on each side. If your
computer's measuring system is set in centimeters, set each
side to 2.5 cm. To adjust the page margins, follow these 2
steps:
Step two. In the Page Setup dialog box, under the Margins
tab, set all your margins to 1" (or 2.5 cm). Make sure the
gutter is set at 0".
That's it.
Tom Johnson. tjohnson@aucegypt.edu. Last updated May 2004.
Step one. After highlighting your text (control + a), click on Paragraph
under the Format menu.
Step two. In the Paragraph dialog box, choose Double under Line
Spacing.
Voila!
References