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EssayEdge.com Admissions Essay Help 
Admissions Essay Editing
 
Essay Helper Home
Lesson One:
Tackling the Question
 
Lesson Two:
Brainstorming a Topic

 
Lesson Three:
Structure and Outline

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Example Essay Structures
Sample Outline and Essay
Short Essays
Outline Worksheet
Templates

Lesson Four:

Style and Tone
Lesson Five:
Intros and Conclusions

Lesson Six:
Editing and Revising

 

  

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A Comprehensive Admissions Essay Help Course (with samples):

Lesson Three: Structure and Outline
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Introduction

The easiest way to sabotage all the work you have done so far is to skip this lesson. Writing is as much a discipline as it is an art, and to ensure that your essays flow well and make sense, you need to construct solid outlines before you write. Unless you conscientiously impose structure around your ideas, your essay will be rambling and ineffective. An outline should make sense on its own; the ideas should follow logically in the order that you list them. As you add content around these main points, these words should support and reinforce the logic of the outline. Finally, the outline should conclude with an insightful thought or image. Make sure that the rest of your outline reinforces this conclusion.

The body paragraphs should consist of events, experiences, and activities you have already organized in chronological order or in order of importance. In many of the essays that our editors read, the order of paragraphs seems to have been chosen at random. Make clear why one point follows another: each point in your outline should connect with the next; each main category should be linked to your introduction or thesis; and each sub-category should be linked to the main category. As you make your outline you should be able to see where there are holes in your essay.

Continue on to descriptions and examples of various essay structures, a sample outline and essay, short essay strategies and samples, and essay writing templates to help cure the worst cases of writer's block.

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From ESSAYS THAT WILL GET YOU INTO COLLEGE,
by Amy Burnham, Daniel Kaufman, and Chris Dowhan.
Copyright 1998 by Dan Kaufman.  Reprinted by arrangement with Barron's Educational Series, Inc.

 

 

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