| Home - Books - Reviews - Tutorials - Software - Download - Orders - Newsletter | |
| Subscribe here for our free email newsletter - monthly update |
Custom Search
|
How to Plan Essays
1. Strategy
You can approach the composition of an essay using a number of different writing strategies. Some people like to start writing and wait to see what develops. Others work up scraps of ideas until they perceive a shape emerging. However, if you are in any doubt at all, it's a good idea to plan your work. The task of writing is usually much easier if you create a set of notes which outline the points you are going to make. Using this approach, you will create a basic structure on which your ideas can be built.
2. Plans
3. Analyse the question
4. Generate ideas
Richard Turley, Writing Essays: A guide for students in English and
the humanities, London: Routledge, 2000, pp.145.
Explains how to generate the structure of an essay - by exploring the question. Covers making links between topics and guiding readers through an argument. Shows how to go through a series of edits to clarify and improve ideas. Also covers quotations and the conventions of scholarly referencing, which many students find difficult.
Full review HERE
5. Choosing topics
6. Put topics in order
7. Arrange your evidence
8. Make necessary changes
9. Finalise essay plan
10. Relevance
11.Example
Stylewriter is a software program which offers help with writing skills such as summarising, editing, and proof-reading your work. It also offers a selection of writing styles to choose from - academic writing, journalism, formal prose, and so on. Mistakes and suggestions for improvement are highlighted and done in a single click.
'Do you think that depictions of sex and violence in the media should or should not be more heavily censored?' Introduction Sex, violence, and censorship all emotive subjects Case against censorship 1. Aesthetic: inhibits artistic talent, distorts art and truth. 2. Individual judgement: individuals have the right to decide for themselves what they watch or read. Similarly, nobody has the right to make up someone else's mind. 3. Violence and sex as catharsis (release from tension): portrayal of these subjects can release tension through this kind of experience at 'second hand'. 4. Violence can deter: certain films can show violence which reinforces opposition to it, e.g. - A Clockwork Orange, All Quiet on the Western Front. 5. Censorship makes sex dirty: we are too repressed about this subject, and censorship sustains the harmful mystery which has surrounded us for so long. 6. Politically dangerous: Censorship in one area can lead to it being extended to others - e.g., political ideas. 7. Impractical: Who decides? How is it to be done? Is it not impossible to be 'correct'? Any decision has to be arbitrary Case for censorship 1. Sex is private and precious: it should not be demeaned by representations of it in public. 2. Sex can be offensive: some people may find it so and should not have to risk being exposed to what they would find pornographic. 3. Corruption can be progressive: can begin with sex and continue until all 'decent values' are eventually destroyed. 4. Participants might be corrupted: especially true of young children. 5. Violence can encourage imitation: by displaying violence - even while condemning it -it can be legitimised and can also encourage imitation amongst a dangerous minority. 6. Violence is often glorified: encourages callous attitudes. Conclusion Case against censorship much stronger. No necessary connection between the two topics.
|
|
| Home - Books - Reviews - Tutorials - Software - Download - Orders - Newsletter | |
|
Mantex - PO Box 100 - Manchester M20 6GZ - UK Tel: +44 0161 432 5811 — Email: info@mantex.co.uk Copyright © Mantex 2000—2007 |