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  • Hi, this is Laura Turner, and today we're going to talk about how to write an essay.

  • Writing an essay is probably one of the most important skills you will learn through your

  • life. It will help you write so many other things that you're going to need for other

  • situations in your life, other than just writing about academic things. So, listen to my advice.

  • And hopefully, you'll be able to write a very good essay, by the time you've listened to

  • this. So, first of all, choose a topic. Make it very specific. Don't choose for example,

  • I'm going to write a paper about China, right? Say, I'm going to write a paper about the

  • Olympics in Beijing in 2008. OK. Make it very specific. Even make it more specific. Say,

  • I'm going to write a paper about Ladies' Gymnastics in Beijing in 2008. And so, therefore, you

  • sort of pare it down. Make the topic as specific as you need it for the length of the paper

  • that you're writing. So, for example, if you have a ten page paper, you might ought to

  • take perhaps two different sports from the Olympics, to write about in your paper. If

  • a five page paper, one is probably going to do you pretty well. So, choose a topic that

  • is specific enough for the length at which you need to write it. Number two, gather research

  • about your topic. Go and find sources, also again, appropriate to how long your paper

  • is going to be. Number three, I would really start off, this is what I do whenever I write

  • an essay. I would start off writing freely, about the topic. Hopefully, you're a little

  • interested in it, and you can actually just, sort of talk to yourself on paper about what

  • you want to write about. And then once you've written down a good bit of information, sort

  • of take that information, and form it into paragraphs. The last thing I want to talk

  • about, is how to form your introductory paragraph. Which is perhaps your most important paragraph

  • in your essay. Because in your into paragraph you are not only going to tell the reader

  • what you're going to do, but you're also going to tell yourself what you're going to write

  • about. And, actually I have an example of one of my papers here. About Huckleberry Finn

  • and Huck Finn's moral journey. So, therefore, I say in my first paragraph here, that Mark

  • Twain writes in this novel. It is a novel that examines the experiences of a child who

  • walks the fine line between right and wrong. And then, I continue, through this paragraph,

  • to actually point out three different points. The Wilkes sisters in the novel. Episode,

  • the two episodes on the Walter, the steamboat, the Walter Scott, and the feud between the

  • Sheperdsons and the Grangerford family. And so, in my essay I'm going to write about these

  • three things. I have nailed it down in my introductory paragraph. I have told through

  • the title, as well as the intro sentence, what the, the essay's going to be about. And

  • then, I go ahead, at the end, and I say that Huckleberry Finn grows up by the end of his

  • journey. That's the end of my introductory paragraph, and that's what I'm going to prove

  • by the end of the essay. So, you almost have your entire essay in your first introductory

  • paragraph.

Hi, this is Laura Turner, and today we're going to talk about how to write an essay.

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