Education is not filling a pail, but the lighting of a
fire.
-- William Butler Yeats
-- William Butler Yeats
Why is writing an essay so frustrating?
Learning how to write an essay
can be a maddening, exasperating process, but it doesn't have to be. If you
know the steps and understand what to do, writing can be easy and even fun.
This site, "How To Write an Essay: 10 Easy Steps," offers a ten-step process that teaches students how to write an essay. Links to the writing steps are found on the left, and additional writing resources are located across the top.
Brief Overview of the 10 Essay Writing Steps
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.
1.
Research: Begin
the essay writing process by researching your topic, making yourself an expert.
Utilize the internet, the academic databases, and the library. Take notes and
immerse yourself in the words of great thinkers.
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.
4. Thesis: Pick
your best idea and pin it down in a clear assertion that you can write your
entire essay around. Your thesis is your main point, summed up in a concise
sentence that lets the reader know where you're going, and why. It's
practically impossible to write a good essay without a clear thesis.
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.)
7. Paragraphs:
Each individual paragraph should be focused on a single idea that
supports your thesis. Begin paragraphs with topic sentences, support assertions
with evidence, and expound your ideas in the clearest, most sensible way you
can. Speak to your reader as if he or she were sitting in front of you. In
other words, instead of writing the essay, try talking the essay.
8. Conclusion:
Gracefully exit your essay by making a quick wrap-up sentence, and then
end on some memorable thought, perhaps a quotation, or an interesting twist of
logic, or some call to action. Is there something you want the reader to walk
away and do? Let him or her know exactly what.
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..
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