PART
ONE: INTRODUCTION
What
is an essay?
An essay is a
relatively short piece of writing on a particular topic. However, the word essay also means attempt or try. An essay is, therefore, a short
piece written by someone attempting to explore a topic or answer a question.
Why bother writing an essay?
Most of the time,
students write essays only because they are required to do so by a classroom
instructor. Thus, students come to believe that essays are important primarily to
demonstrate their knowledge to a teacher or professor. This is simply, and
dangerously, wrong (even though such writing for demonstration may be
practically necessary).
The primary reason to write an essay is so that the
writer can formulate and organize an informed, coherent and sophisticated set
of ideas about something important.
Why is it
important to bother with developing sophisticated ideas, in turn? It’s because
there is no difference between doing so and thinking, for starters. It is
important to think because action based on thinking is likely to be far less
painful and more productive than action based upon ignorance. So, if you want
to have a life characterized by competence, productivity, security, originality
and engagement rather than one that is nasty, brutish and short, you need to
think carefully about important issues. There is no better way to do so than to
write. This is because writing extends your memory, facilitates editing and
clarifies your thinking.
You can write down
more than you can easily remember, so that your capacity to consider a number
of ideas at the same time is broadened. Furthermore, once those ideas are
written down, you can move them around and change them, word by word, sentence
by sentence, and paragraph by paragraph. You can also reject ideas that appear
substandard, after you consider them more carefully. If you reject substandard
ideas, then all that you will have left will be good ideas. You can keep those,
and use them. Then you will have good, original ideas at your fingertips, and
you will be able to organize and communicate them.
Consider your success
over the course of a lifetime. Here is something to think about: the person who
can formulate and communicate the best argument almost always wins. If you want
a job, you have to make a case for yourself. If you want a raise, you have to
convince someone that you deserve it. If you are trying to convince someone of
the validity of your idea, you have to debate its merits successfully,
particularly if there are others with other competing ideas.
If you sharpen
your capacity to think and to communicate as a consequence of writing, you are
better armed. The pen is mightier than the sword, as the saying goes. This is
no cheap clich茅. Ideas change the world, particularly when they are written. The
Romans built buildings, and the Romans and the buildings are both gone. The
Jews wrote a book, and they are still here, and so is the book. So it turns out
that words may well last longer than stone, and have more impact than whole
empires.
If you learn to
write and to edit, you will also be able to tell the difference between good
ideas, intelligently presented, and bad ideas put forth by murky and unskilled
thinkers. That means that you will be able to separate the wheat from the chaff
(look it up). Then you can be properly influenced by profound and solid ideas
instead of falling prey to foolish fads and whims and ideologies, which can range
in their danger from trivial to mortal.
Those who can
think and communicate are simply more powerful than those who cannot, and
powerful in the good way, the way that means “able to do a wide range of things
competently and efficiently.” Furthermore, the further up the ladder of
competence you climb, with your well-formulated thoughts, the more important
thinking and communicating become. At the very top of the most complex
hierarchies (law, medicine, academia, business, theology, politics) nothing is
more necessary and valuable. If you can think and communicate, you can also
defend yourself, and your friends and family, when that becomes necessary, and
it will become necessary at various points in your life.
Finally, it is
useful to note that your mind is organized verbally, at the highest and most
abstract levels. Thus, if you learn to think, through writing, then you will develop
a well-organized, efficient mind – and one that is well-founded and certain.
This also means that you will be healthier, mentally and physically, as lack of
clarity and ignorance means unnecessary stress. Unnecessary stress makes your
body react more to what could otherwise be treated as trivial affairs. This makes
for excess energy expenditure, and more rapid aging (along with all the
negative health-related consequences of aging).
So, unless you
want to stay an ignorant, unhealthy lightweight, learn to write (and to think
and communicate). Otherwise those who can will ride roughshod over you and push
you out of the way. Your life will be harder, at the bottom of the dominance
hierarchies that you will inevitably inhabit, and you will get old fast.
Don’t ever
underestimate the power of words. Without them, we would still be living in
trees. So when you are writing an essay, you are harnessing the full might of
culture to your life. That is why you write an essay (even if it has been
assigned). Forget that, and you are doing something stupid, trivial and dull.
Remember it, and you are conquering the unknown.
A note on technology
If you are a
student, or anyone else who is going to do a lot of writing, then you should provide
yourself with the right technology, especially now, when it is virtually
costless to do so. Obviously, you need a computer. It doesn’t have to be that
good, although a digital hard drive is a good investment for speed. Less
obviously, you need two screens, one set up beside the other. They don’t have
to be bigger than 19” diagonal. Even 17” monitors will do well. High resolution
is better. You need the two screens so that you can present your reference
material on one screen, and your essay (or even two versions of your essay,
side by side) on the other.
Having this extra
visual real estate really matters. It will make you less cramped and more
efficient. A good keyboard (such as the Microsoft Natural Ergonomic keyboard)
is also an excellent investment. Standard keyboards will hurt your hands if you
use them continually, and the less said about a notebook keyboard the better.
Use a good mouse, as well, and not a touchpad, which requires too much finicky
movement for someone who is really working. Set up the keyboards so you are
looking directly at their centers when you are sitting up straight. Use a
decent chair, and sit so that your feet can rest comfortably on the floor when
your knees are bent 90 degrees. These are not trivial issues. You may spend
hours working on your writing, so you have to set up a workspace that will not
annoy you, or you will have just one more good reason to avoid your tasks and
assignments.
A note on use of time
People’s brains
function better in the morning. Get up. Eat something. You are much smarter and
more resilient after you have slept properly and ate. There is plenty of solid
research demonstrating this. Coffee alone is counter-productive. Have some
protein and some fat. Make a smoothie with fruit and real yogurt. Go out and
buy a cheap breakfast, if necessary. Eat by whatever means necessary. Prepare
to spend between 90 minutes and three hours writing. However, even 15 minutes
can be useful, particularly if you do it every day.
Do not wait for a
big chunk of free time to start. You will never get big chunks of free time
ever in your life, so don’t make your success dependent on their non-existent.
The most effective writers write every day, at least a bit.
Realize that when
you first sit down to write, your mind will rebel. It is full of other ideas,
all of which will fight to dominate. You could be looking at Facebook, or
Youtube, or watching or reading online porn, or cleaning the dust bunnies from
under your bed, or rearranging your obsolete CD collection, or texting an old
flame, or reading a book for another course, or getting the groceries you need,
or doing the laundry, or having a nap, or going for a walk (because you need
the exercise), or phoning a friend or a parent – the list is endless. Each part
of your mind that is concerned with such things will make its wants known, and
attempt to distract you. Such pesky demons can be squelched, however, with
patience. If you refuse to be tempted for fifteen minutes (25 on a really bad
day) you will find that the clamor in your mind will settle down and you will
be able to concentrate on writing. If you do this day after day, you will find
that the power of such temptations do not reduce, but the duration of their
attempts to distract you will decrease. You will also find that even on a day
where concentration is very difficult, you will still be able to do some productive
writing if you stick it out.
Don’t kid yourself
into thinking you will write for six hours, either. Three is a maximum,
especially if you want to sustain it day after day. Don’t wait too late to
start your writing, so you don’t have to cram insanely, but give yourself a
break after a good period of sustained concentration. Three productive hours
are way better than ten hours of self-deceptive non-productivity, even in the
library.
PART TWO: LEVELS OF RESOLUTION
Words, sentences, paragraphs and more
An essay, like any
piece of writing, exists at multiple levels of resolution, simultaneously. First
is the selection of the word. Second is the crafting of the sentence. Each
word should be precisely the right word, in the right location in each
sentence. The sentence itself should present a thought, part of the idea
expressed in the paragraph, in a grammatically correct manner. Each sentence
should be properly arranged and sequenced inside a paragraph, the third
level of resolution. As a rule of thumb, a paragraph should be made up of at
least 10 sentences or 100 words. This might be regarded as a stupid rule,
because it is arbitrary. However, you should let it guide you, until you know
better. You have very little right to break the rules, until you have mastered
them.
Here’s a little
story to illustrate that idea, taken in part from a document called the Codex Bezae.
Christ is walking down the road on the Sabbath, when good
Jews of that time were not supposed to work. In the ditch, he sees a shepherd,
trying to rescue a sheep from a hole that it has fallen into. It is very hot
and, clearly, the sheep will not be in very good shape if it spends a whole day
in the desert sun. On the other hand, it is the Sabbath. Christ looks at the
shepherd and says, “Man, if indeed thou knowest what thou doest, thou art
blessed: but if thou knowest not, thou art cursed, and a transgressor of the
law.” Then he walks on down the road.
The point is this:
There is a rest day for a reason. Otherwise people would work all the time.
Then they would be chronically unhappy and exhausted. They would compete each
other to death. So if it’s time for everybody to rest, then rest, and don’t be
breaking the rule. However, it is also not good to let a sheep die in the hot
sun, when a few minutes of labor might save it. So, if you are respectful of
the rule, and conscious of its importance, and realize that it serves as a
bulwark against the chaos of the unknown, and you still decide to break it,
carefully, because the particularities of the circumstances demand it – well,
then, more power to you. If you are just a careless, ignorant, antisocial
narcissist instead, however, then look out. You break a rule at your peril,
whether you know it or not.
Rules are there
for a reason. You are only allowed to break them if you are a master. If you’re
not a master, don’t confuse your ignorance with creativity or style. Writing
that follows the rules is easier for readers, because they know roughly what to
expect. So rules are conventions. Like all conventions, they are sometimes
sub-optimal. But not very often. So, to begin with, use the conventions. For
example, aim to make your paragraphs about 10 sentences or 100 words long.
A paragraph should
present a single idea, using multiple sentences. If you can’t think up 100
words to say about your idea, it’s probably not a very good idea, or you need
to think more about it. If your paragraph is rambling on for 300 words, or
more, it’s possible that it has more than one idea in it, and should be broken
up.
All of the
paragraphs have to be arranged in a logical progression, from the beginning of
the essay to the end. This is the fourth level of resolution. Perhaps
the most important step in writing an essay is getting the paragraphs in proper
order. Each of them is a stepping stone to your essay’s final destination.
The fifth
level of resolution is the essay, as a whole. Every element of an essay can be
correct, each word, sentence, and paragraph – even the paragraph order – and
the essay can still fail, because it is just not interesting or important. It
is very hard for competent but uninspired writers to understand this kind of
failure, because a critic cannot merely point it out. There is no answer to
their question, “exactly where did I make a mistake?” Such an essay is just not
good. An essay without originality or creativity might fall into this category.
Sometimes a creative person, who is not technically proficient as a writer, can
make the opposite mistake: their word choice is poor, their sentences badly
constructed and poorly organized within their paragraphs, their paragraphs in
no intelligible relationship to one another – and yet the essay as a whole can
succeed, because there are valuable thoughts trapped within it, wishing
desperately to find expression.
Additional levels
You might think
that there could not possibly be anything more to an essay than these five
levels of resolution or analysis, but you would be wrong. This is something
that was first noticed, perhaps, by those otherwise entirely reprehensible and
destructive scholars known as post-modernists. An essay necessarily exists
within a context of interpretation, made up of the reader (level six), and the
culture that the reader is embedded in (level seven), which is made up in part
of the assumptions that he or she will bring to the essay. Levels six and seven
have deep roots in biology and culture. You might think, “Why do I need to know
this?” but if you don’t you are not considering your audience, and that’s a
mistake. Part of the purpose
of the essay is to set your mind straight, but the other part, equally
important, is to communicate with an audience.
For the essay to
succeed, brilliantly, it has to work at all of these levels of resolution
simultaneously. That is very difficult, but it is in that difficulty that the
value of the act of writing exists.
Considerations of Aesthetics and Fascination
This is not all
that has to be properly managed when you write an essay. You should also strive
for brevity, which is concise and efficient expression, as well as beauty,
which is the melodic or poetic aspect of your language (at all the requisite
levels of analysis). Finally, you should not be bored, or boring. If you are
bored while writing, then, most importantly, you are doing it wrong, and you
will also bore your reader. Think of it this way: you get bored for a reason,
and sometimes for a good reason. You may be bored while writing your essay
because you are actually lying to yourself in a very deep way about what you
are doing and why you are doing it. Your mind, independent of your ego, cannot
be hoodwinked into attending to something that you think is uninteresting or
useless. It will automatically regard such a thing as unworthy of attention,
and make you bored by it.
If you are bored
by your essay, you have either chosen the wrong topic (one which makes no
difference to you and, in all likelihood, to anyone else) or you are
approaching a good topic in a substandard manner. Perhaps you are resentful
about having to write the essay, or afraid of its reception, or lazy, or
ignorant, or unduly and arrogantly skeptical, or something of the kind.
You have to place
yourself in the correct state of mind to write properly. That state of mind is
partly aesthetic. You have to be trying to produce something of worth, beauty
and elegance. If you think that is ridiculous, then you are far too stupid at
the moment to write properly. You need to meditate long and hard on why you
would dare presume that worth, beauty and elegance are unworthy of your
pursuit. Do you plan to settle for ugly and uncouth? Do you want to destroy,
instead of build?
You must choose a
topic that is important to you. This should be formulated as a question that
you want to answer. This is
arguably the hardest part of writing an essay: choosing the proper question.
Perhaps your instructor has provided you with a list of topics, and you think
you are off the hook as a consequence. You’re not. You still have to determine
how to write about one of those topics in a manner that is compelling to you. It’s
a moral, spiritual endeavour.
If you properly
identify something of interest to you, then you have put yourself in alignment
with the deeper levels of your psyche, your spirit. If these deeper levels do
not want or need an answer to the question you have posed, you will not
possibly be interested in it. So the fact of your interest is evidence of the
importance of the topic. You, or some part of you, needs the answer – and such
needs can be deep enough so that life itself can depend upon them. Someone
desperate, for example, might find the question “why live?” of extreme
interest, and absolutely require an answer that makes life’s suffering worth
bearing. It is not necessary to ensure that every question you try or essay to
answer of that level of importance, but you should not waste your time with
ideas that do not grip you.
So, the proper
attitude is interested and aesthetically sensitive.
Having said all
that, here is something to remember: finished
beats perfect. Most people fail a
class or an assignment or a work project not because they write badly, and geta
D’s or F’s, but because they don’t write at all, and get zeroes. Zeroes are
very bad. They are the black holes of numbers. Zeroes make you fail. Zeroes
ruin your life. Essays handed in, no matter how badly written, can usually get
you at least a C. So don’t be a completely self-destructive idiot. Hand
something in, regardless of how pathetic you think it is (and no matter how
accurate you are in that opinion).
PART THREE: THE TOPIC AND THE READING LIST
The central
question that you are trying to answer with the essay is the topic question.
Here are some potentially interesting topic questions:
·
Does evil exist?
·
Are all cultures equally
worthy of respect?
·
How should a man and a
woman treat each other in a relationship?
·
What, if anything, makes
a person good?
·
These are very general,
abstract topics. That makes them philosophical. Good topics do not have to be
so general. Here are some good, more specific topics:
·
What were the key events
of Julius Caesar’s rule?
·
What are the critical
elements of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution?
·
Is “The Sun Also Rises,”
by Ernest Hemingway, an important book?
·
How might Carl Jung and
Sigmund Freud’s theory of the psyche be contrasted?
·
How did Newton and
Einstein differ in their conceptualization of time?
·
Was the recent Iraq war
just or unjust?
You can begin your
essay writing process two different ways. You can either list the topics you
have been assigned, or list ten or so questions that you might want to answer,
if you are required to choose your own topic, or you can start to create and
finalize your reading list. If you think you can already identify several
potential topics of interest, start with Topics. If you are unsure, then start
constructing your Reading List.
CHOICE BETWEEN TOPICS and READING LIST
Topics
Put these in
question form, as in the examples above.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
If you can’t do
this, then you have to do some more reading (which you will likely have to do
to complete the essay anyway). There is, by the way, no such thing as reader’s
block. If you can’t write, it is because you have nothing to say. You have no
ideas. In such a situation, don’t pride yourself on your writer’s block. Read
something. If that doesn’t work, read something else – maybe something better.
Repeat until the problem is solved.
Reading List
Indicate here what
you have to or want to read. These should be books or articles, generally
speaking. If you don’t know what articles or books might be appropriate or
useful, then you could start with Wikipedia articles or other encyclopedic
sources, and look at their reference lists for ideas about further reading. These
sources are fine as a beginning.
If you find
someone whose writing is particularly interesting and appropriate, it is often
very useful to see if you can find out what authors they admired and read. You
can do this by noting who they refer to, in the text of their writings or in
the reference list. You can meander productively through wide bodies of
learning in this manner.
Assume you need
5-10 books or articles per thousand words of essay, unless you have been
instructed otherwise. A double-spaced page of typing usually contains about 250
words. List your sources now, even if you have to do it badly. You can always
make it better later.
Reading 1.
Notes: (see next
section for Notes on Notes):
Reading 2.
Notes:
Reading 3.
Notes:
Reading 4.
Notes:
Reading 5.
Notes:
Reading 6.
Notes:
Reading 7.
Notes:
Reading 8.
Notes:
Reading 9.
Notes:
Reading 10 (repeat
if necessary).
Notes (repeat if
necessary):
A Psychological Note and some Notes on Notes.
While you are
reading, see if you can notice anything that catches your attention. This might
be something you think is important, or something that you seriously disagree
with, or something that you might want to know more about. You have to pay
careful attention to your emotional reactions to do this.
You also want to
take some notes. You can place your notes below the readings you listed above.
When you are taking notes, don’t bother doing stupid things
like highlighting or underlining sentences in the textbook. There is no
evidence that it works. It just looks like work. What you need to do is to read
for understanding. Read a bit, then write down what you have learned or any
questions that have arisen in your mind. Don’t ever copy the source word for
word. The most important part of learning and
remembering is the recreation of what you have written in your own language.
This is not some simplistic “use your own words.” This is the dialog you are
having with the writer of your sources. This is your attempt to say back to the
author “this is what I understand you are saying.” This is where you extract
the gist of the writing.
If someone asks you about your day, you don’t say, “Well,
first I opened my eyes. Then I blinked and rubbed them. Then I placed my left
leg on the floor, and then my right.” You would bore them to death. Instead, you
eliminate the extra detail, and concentrate on communicating what is important.
That is exactly what you are supposed to be doing when you take some notes
during or after reading (after is often better, with the book closed, so that
you are not tempted to copy the author’s writing word for word so that you can
fool yourself into thinking you did some work).
If you find
note-taking in this manner difficult, try this. Read a paragraph. Look away.
Then say to yourself, out loud, even in a whisper (if you are in a library),
what the paragraph meant. Listen to what you said, and then quickly write it
down.
Take about two to three
times as many notes, by word, as you will need for your essay. You might think
that is inefficient, but it’s not. In order to write intelligibly about
something, or to speak intelligently about it, you need to know far more than
you actually communicate. That helps you master level six and seven, described
previously – the context within which the essay is to be understood. Out of those
notes you should be able to derive 8-10 topic questions. Do so. Remember, they
can be edited later. Just get them down.
PART FOUR: THE OUTLINE
At this point you
have prepared a list of topics, and a reading list. Now it’s time to choose a
topic.
ENTER TOPIC HERE
1.
Here’s another
rule. When you write your first draft, it should be longer than the final
version. This is so that you have some extra writing to throw away. You want to
have something to throw away after the first draft so that you only have to
keep what is good. It is NOT faster to try to write exactly as many words as
you need when you first sit down to write. Trying to do so merely makes you too
aware of what you are writing. This concern will slow you down. Aim at
producing a first draft that is 25% longer than the final draft is supposed to
be. If your final work is to be 1000 words, then write that (or four pages)
below. The word document will automatically add 25% to the length you specify.
Now specify the
length of your essay.
WORDS:
PAGES:
ADD 25% TO THE ABOVE LENGTHS
Now you have to
write an outline. This is the most difficult part of writing an essay,
and it’s not optional. The outline of an essay is like the skeleton of a body.
It provides its fundamental form and structure. Furthermore, the outline is
basically the argument (with the sentences themselves and the words serving
that argument).
A thousand-word essay requires a ten-sentence outline.
However, the fundamental outline of an essay should not get much longer than
fifteen sentences, even if the essay is several thousand words or more in
length. This is because it is difficult to keep an argument of more than that
length in mind at one time so that you can assess the quality of its structure.
So, write a ten to fifteen sentence outline of your essay, and if it is longer
than a thousand words, then make sub-outlines for each primary outline
sentence. Here is an example of a good simple outline:
·
Topic: Who was Abraham
Lincoln?
·
Why is Abraham Lincoln
worthy of remembrance?
·
What were the crucial
events of his childhood?
·
Of his adolescence?
·
Of his young adulthood?
·
How did he enter
politics?
·
What were his major
challenges?
·
What were the primary
political and economic issues of his time?
·
Who were his enemies?
·
How did he deal with
them?
·
What were his major
accomplishments?
·
How did he die?
Here is an example
of a good longer outline (for a three thousand word essay):
·
Topic: What is
capitalism?
·
How has capitalism been
defined?
o Author
1
o Author
2
o Author
3
·
Where and when did
capitalism develop?
o Country
1
o Country
2
·
How did capitalism
develop in the first 50 years after its origin?
o How
did capitalism develop in the second 50 years after its origin?
o (Repeat
as necessary)
·
Historical precursors?
o (choose
as many centuries as necessary)
·
Advantages of capitalism?
o Wealth
generation
o Technological
advancement
o Personal
freedom
·
Disadvantages of
capitalism?
o Unequal
distribution
o Pollution
and other externalized costs
·
Alternatives to
capitalism?
o Fascism
o Communism
·
Consequences of these alternatives?
·
Potential future
developments?
·
Conclusion
Beware of the
tendency to write trite, repetitive and clich茅d introductions and conclusions.
It is often useful to write a stock
intro (what is the purpose of this essay? How is it going to proceed?) and a
stock conclusion (How did this essay proceed? What was its purpose?) but they
should usually then be thrown away. Write your outline here. Try for one
outline heading per 100 words of essay length. You can add subdivisions, as in
the example regarding capitalism, above.
Write outline
here:
1. Outline
sentence 1:
2. Outline
sentence 2:
3. Outline
sentence 3:
4. Outline
sentence 4:
5. Outline
sentence 5:
6. Outline
sentence 6:
7. Outline
sentence 7:
8. Outline
sentence 8:
9. Outline
sentence 9:
10. Outline
sentence 10 (repeat if necessary):
PART FIVE: PARAGRAPHS
So, now you have
your outline. Copy it here:
OUTLINE COPIED HERE
Now, write ten to
fifteen sentences per outline heading to complete your paragraph. You may find
it helpful to add additional subdivisions to your outline, and to work back and
forth between the outline and the sentences, editing both. Use your notes, as
well. Use single spacing at this point, so that you can see more writing on the
paper at once. You will format your essay properly later.
Don’t worry too
much about how well you are writing at this point. It is also best at this
point not to worry too much about the niceties of sentence structure and
grammar. That is all best left for the second major step, which is editing. You should think of the essay
writing process as twofold. The first major step is the first draft, which can
be relatively quick and dirty. For the first draft you can use your notes,
extensively, and rough out the essay. If you get stuck writing anywhere, just
move to the next outline sentence. You can always go back.
The second major step is editing. Production (the first
major step) and editing (the second) are different functions, and should be
treated that way. This is because each interferes with
the other. The purpose of production is to produce. The function of editing is
to reduce and arrange. If you try to do both at the same time then the editing
stymies the production. It’s not faster to combine them, nor is it better, and
it is bound to be frustrating.
Here is an example
of writing associated with an outline question: (note: places where references
are necessary are indicate as (REFERENCE, 19XX). How to format these references
will be discussed later.
Outline sentence: How has capitalism been
defined?
Something as complex as
capitalism cannot be easily defined. Different authors have each offered their
opinion. Liberal or conservative thinkers stress the importance of private
property and the ownership rights that accompany such property as key to
capitalism (REFERENCE, 19XX). Such private property (including valuable goods
and the means by which they are produced) can be traded, freely, with other
property owners, in a market where the price is set by public demand, rather
than by any central agency. Liberal and conservative thinkers stress efficiency
of production, as well as quality, and consider profit the motive for
efficiency. They believe that lower cost is a desirable feature of production,
and that fair competition helps ensure desirably lower prices.
The World Socialist
Movement (REFERENCE, 19XX), an international consortium of far left political
parties, defines capitalism, by contrast, as ownership of the means of
production by a small minority of people, the capitalist class, who profitably
exploit the working class, the genuine producers, who must sell their ability
to work for a salary or wage. Such
socialists believe that it is profit that solely motivates capitalism, and that
the profit motive is essentially corrupt. Modern environmentalists tend to add
the natural world itself to the list of capitalist targets of exploitation
(REFERENCE, 19XX). Thinkers on the right tend to regard problems emerging from
the capitalist system as real, but trivial in comparison to those produced by
other economic and political systems, real and hypothetical. Thinkers on the
far left regard capitalism as the central cause of problems as serious as
poverty, inequality and environmental degradation, and believe that there are
other political and economic systems whose implementation would constitute an
improvement.
It took two
paragraphs to begin to address the first outline sentence. Notice that the
essay begins without referring to itself. It is better to tell the reader what
the essay will be about and how the topic will be addressed than to meander
around stupidly at the beginning of an essay, but it is still better to grab
the reader’s attention immediately without beating around the bush.
Once you have
completed ten to fifteen sentences for each outline heading, you have finished
your first draft. Now it is time to move to editing.
PART
SIX: EDITING AND ARRANGING OF SENTENCES
WITHIN PARAGRAPHS
Copy the first
paragraph of your first draft here:
Paragraph 1:
Now, place each
sentence on its own line, so it looks like this (this example is taken from the
first paragraph on capitalism, above):
Something as complex as capitalism cannot be easily
defined.
Different authors have each offered their opinion.
Liberal or conservative thinkers stress the importance
of private property and the ownership rights that accompany such property as
key to capitalism (REFERENCE, 19XX).
Such private property (including valuable goods and
the means by which they are produced) can be traded, freely, with other
property owners, in a market where the price is set by public demand, rather
than by any central agency.
Liberal and conservative thinkers stress efficiency of
production, as well as quality, and consider profit the motive for efficiency.
They believe that lower cost is a desirable feature of
production, and that fair competition helps ensure desirably lower prices.
Now, write another version of each sentence, under each
sentence, like this:
Liberal
and conservative thinkers stress efficiency of production, as well as quality,
and consider profit the motive for efficiency.
Liberal and
conservative thinkers alike stress the importance of quality and efficiency,
and see them as properly rewarded by profit.
In this example,
the meaning of the sentence has been changed slightly, during the rewrite. It
may be that the second sentence flows better than the first, and is also more
precise and meaningful. See if you can make each sentence you have written
better, in a similar manner:
·
Better would mean shorter and simpler
(as all unnecessary words should be eliminated). There is almost nothing a
novice writer can do that will improve his or her writing more rapidly than
writing very short sentences.
See if you can cut the length of each sentence by 15-25%. Remember, earlier,
you tried to make your essay longer than necessary. Here you can start cleaning
it up.
·
Better would mean that
each word is precisely and exactly the right word. Don’t be tempted to use any word that you would be
uncomfortable to use in spoken conversation. Often, new writers try to impress
their readers with their vocabulary. This often backfires when words are
used that are technically correct but whose connotation is not, or that are
unsuitable within the context of the sentence, paragraph or full essay. An
expert writer will spot such flaws immediately, and see them for what they are:
forms of camouflage and deception. Write clearly at a vocabulary level you have
mastered (with maybe a bit of stretching, to produce improvement).
Read each sentence
aloud, and listen to how it sounds. If it’s awkward, see if you can say it a
different, better way. Listen to what you said, and then write it down. Rewrite
each sentence. Once you have done this with all the sentences, read the old
versions and the new versions, and replace the old with the new if the new is
better. Then copy the new paragraph here:
New paragraph 1:
Repeat for each
paragraph:
New paragraph 2:
New paragraph 3:
New paragraph 4:
New paragraph 5
(etc.):
Now you are going
to try to improve each of those paragraphs. Copy them again here, unchanged
(you are doing this so that you can easily compare the improved paragraphs to
the originals, so that you can be sure they are truly improved, before you keep
them):
New paragraph 1
(copy):
New paragraph 2
(copy):
New paragraph 3 (copy):
New paragraph 4
(copy):
New paragraph 5
(copy) (etc.):
Start with
paragraph 1. Break it up into single sentences, as you did before. Now check to
see if the sentences are in the best possible order, within each paragraph.
Drag and drop them, or cut and paste them, into better order.
You can also
eliminate sentences that are no longer necessary. When you are satisfied with
the first paragraph (which means that the sentences are necessary, short and
punchy, and in the correct order) then go ahead to the next paragraph and do
the same thing.
PART
SEVEN: RE-ORDERING THE PARAGRAPHS
Now, copy all of
the new, improved paragraphs that you have edited here:
New improved
paragraph 1:
New improved
paragraph 2:
New improved
paragraph 3:
New improved paragraph
4:
New improved
paragraph 5 (etc.):
Now you are going
to try to improve the order of those new, improved paragraphs. Copy them here,
again, unchanged.
New improved
paragraph 1 (copy):
New improved
paragraph 2 (copy):
New improved
paragraph 3 (copy):
New improved
paragraph 4 (copy):
New improved
paragraph 5 (copy) (etc.):
Now look at the
order of the paragraphs themselves (as you just did with the sentences within
each paragraph). It may well be that by now in the editing process, you will
find that the order of the subtopics within your original outline is no longer
precisely appropriate, and that some re-ordering of those sub-topics is called
for. So, move around the new improved paragraph (copies) above, until they are
ordered more appropriately than they were.
PART EIGHT: GENERATING A NEW OUTLINE
So now you should
have produced a pretty decent second draft. You have identified the appropriate sources, written the
proper notes, outlined your argument, roughed in a first draft (paragraph by paragraph),
rewritten your sentences to make them more elegant, and re-ordered those
sentences, as well as the paragraphs themselves. This is much farther
than most writers ever get. You may even think you’re finished – but you’re not.
The next step will
take you from a “B” essay to an “A” essay. It may even help you write something
that is better than you have ever produced (better meaning richer in information, precise, coherent,
elegant and beautiful). Copy what you have written so far here:
FULL RE-ORDERED ESSAY HERE:
Read it. Then go
to the next page.
This part of the
process will probably strike you as unnecessary, or annoying, or both, but what
do you know? This is the step that separates the men from the boys, or the
women from the boys, or the men from the girls, or whatever version of this
saying is acceptably non-sexist and politically correct.
You have just
finished reading your essay. Try now to write a new outline of ten to fifteen
sentences. Don’t look back at your essay while you are doing this.
If you have to, go back and re-read the whole thing, and then return to this
page, but don’t look at your essay while you are rewriting the outline. If you
force yourself to reconstruct your argument from memory, you will likely
improve it. Generally, when
you remember something, you simplify it, while retaining most of what is
important. Thus, your memory can serve as a filter, removing what is
useless and preserving and organizing what is vital. What you are doing now is
distilling what you have written to its essence.
Write new outline
here:
1. New outline
sentence 1:
2. New outline
sentence 2:
3. New outline
sentence 3:
4. New outline
sentence 4:
5. New outline
sentence 5:
6. New outline
sentence 6:
7. New outline
sentence 7:
8. New outline
sentence 8:
9. New outline
sentence 9:
10. New outline sentence
10 (repeat if necessary):
Now that you have
a new outline, you can cut and paste material from your previous essay. To do
this, open up a new Word document beside this one. Then cut and paste the new
outline that you have written into the new Word document. Return to the
original document, and scroll up to the full, re-ordered essay you copied and
pasted into Part Eight, above. Then cut and paste from the re-ordered essay
into your new outline.
You may find that
you don’t need everything you wrote before. Don’t be afraid to throw
unnecessary material away. You are trying to get rid of what is substandard,
and leave only what is necessary.
Once you have
finished cutting and pasting your old material into the new outline, then copy
the new essay, and paste it into a new word document. That will be your final
essay. Don’t forget to put a title page on it.
PASTE NEWLY OUTLINED ESSAY HERE:
PART NINE: REPEAT
Now you have a
third draft, and it’s probably pretty good. If you really want to take it to
the next level, then you can repeat the process of sentence rewriting and
re-ordering, as well as paragraph re-ordering and re-outlining. Often it is a
good idea to wait a few days to do this, so that you can look at what you have
produced with fresh eyes. Then you will be able to see what you have written,
instead of seeing what you think you wrote (which is the case when you try to
edit immediately after producing).
You are not
genuinely finished until you cannot edit so that your essay improves.
Generally, you can tell if this has happened when you try to rewrite a sentence
(or a paragraph) and you are not sure that the new version is an improvement
over the original.
PART TEN: REFERENCES AND BIBLIOGRAPHY
When you write a
sentence that contains what is supposed to be a fact or at least an informed
opinion, and you have picked it up from something you read, then you have to
refer to that source. Otherwise, following convention, people may accuse you of
plagiarism, which is a form of theft (of intellectual property). There are a
large number of conventions that you can follow to properly structure your
references and your bibliography (which is a list of books and articles that
you have read to obtain relevant background information, but from which you may
not have drawn any ideas specific enough to require a reference).
The conventions of
the American Psychological Association (APA) are commonly used by essay
writers. This convention generally requires the use of the last names of the
authors of the source in parentheses after the sentence requiring a reference.
For example:
It is necessary to add a
reference after a sentence containing an opinion which is not your own, or a
fact that you have acquired from some source material (Peterson, 2014).
This sentence could
also be constructed like this:
Peterson (2014) claims
that it is necessary to add a reference after a sentence containing an opinion
which is not your own, or a fact that you have acquired from some source
material.
There are also
many conventions covering the use of a direct quote, which have to be followed
when you directly quote someone, rather than paraphrasing them. Here is an
example, adding the specific (fictional) number of the page containing the
quoted material in the original manuscript:
Peterson (2014, p. 19)
claims that “the conventions of the American Psychological Association (APA)
are commonly used by essay writers.”
In the Reference
List, at the end of the essay, Peterson’s paper might be listed, as follows
(this is a fictional reference):
Peterson, J.B. (2014).
Essay writing for writers. Journal of Essay Writing, 01, 15-24.
Different
conventions hold for different types of source material such as webpages,
books, and articles. All the details regarding APA style can be found at http://www.apastyle.org/
Your instructor
may have recommended, or demanded, use of a different set of conventions.
Information about other techniques and rules can be found at http://www.easybib.com/reference/guide/mla/general.
It is necessary to
master at least one convention. The rules are finicky and annoying. However,
they are necessary, so that readers know what writers are up to. Furthermore,
you only have to learn them once, so bite the bullet and do it.
Copy your essay
here again.
Add references
where they are necessary. Then, add your reference list to the end of your
essay. Make sure you construct both
according to APA convention, or some other set of rules.
YOUR COMPLETED ESSAY
Now your essay is completed.
Now you need to copy it into a new Word document, and format it properly.
That generally
means double-spaced, with a title page, with a five space tab indent at the
beginning of each paragraph. If you want to add subtitles, or section headers,
their use is discussed in detail at https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/resource/560/01/
. Additional useful information for style, including examples, can be found at http://bit.ly/ZC5eFV
. A video discussing such matters is available at http://bit.ly/ZpX1nR
.
If you got this
far, good work. If you write a number of essays using this process, you will
find that your thinking will become richer and clearer, and so will your
conversation. There is nothing more vital to becoming educated, and there is
nothing more vital than education to your future, and the future of those
around you
Good luck with
your newly organized and refreshed mind.
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