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Ace the Essays? No, Thanks!

by , Dec 30, 2009

TypingWe all know that the essays on the GMAT are scored separately and that the schools dont care as much about the essay scores. We also know we have to write the essays first, before we get to the more important quant and verbal sections, so we dont want to use up too much brain-power on the essays. Still, we cant just bomb the essay section; the schools do care about the essays somewhat. So how do we do a good enough job on the essays without expending so much energy that were negatively affected during the multiple-choice portion of the test?

We need to develop a template, an organizational framework on which to hang our writing. The template will not, of course, tell us exactly what to write. For that, we need the actual essay prompt, which we wont see until we take the test. We can, however, determine how to organize the information ahead of time, as well as the general kinds of messages we need to convey at various points throughout.

The template should tell us:

  • How many paragraphs to use
  • The primary purpose of each of those paragraphs
  • The kinds of information that need to be conveyed in each paragraph

The template will vary a little bit from person to person; the important thing is to have a consistent template for yourself that youve worked out in advance of the official test. In addition, we will need slightly different templates for the two different kinds of essays, so take note of the differences below.

As a general rule, essays should have either four or five paragraphs total. The first paragraph is always the introduction, the last paragraph is always the conclusion, and the body (middle) paragraphs are for the examples we choose to use.

Each paragraph should contain certain things; these are listed in the below sections. The information does not need to be presented in the given order below, though; just make sure that each paragraph does contain the necessary information in some sort of clear and logical order. In addition, the information listed below is the minimum necessary info; you can certainly add more where appropriate.

First Paragraph

  • Summarize the issue
  • State a thesis
  • Acknowledge that the other side does have some merit
  • Introduce your examples

The first paragraph should contain a brief summary of the issue at hand in your own words (don't just repeat what the essay prompt said). For an Argument essay, briefly summarize the conclusion of the given argument. For the Issue essay, briefly summarize the issue upon which the prompt has asked you to convey your opinion. For either, you dont need more than a one to two sentence summary.

The first paragraph should also contain a thesis statement. The thesis is typically one sentence and conveys to the reader your overall message or point for the essay that you wrote. For the Argument essay, you can write most of your thesis sentence before you get to the test! You already know that the Argument will contain flaws, and that you will be discussing how those flaws hurt the authors conclusion. Guess what? Thats your thesis!

While the argument does have some merit, there are several serious flaws which serve to undermine the validity of the authors conclusion that XYZ.

DONT USE THAT EXACT SENTENCE. Theyre going to get suspicious if hundreds of people use the same sentence. (Besides, thats my sentence. Come up with your own! :))

Note the opening clause: While the argument does have some merit. This is whats called acknowledging the other side. We dont say, Hey, your argument is completely terrible! Theres nothing good about it at all! We acknowledge that some parts may be okay, or some people may feel differently, but our position is that the flaws are the most important issue (that is, our thesis is the most important thing).

On the Issue essay, you wont be able to write your thesis statement ahead of time, but you do know youll have to do two things: (1) establish one clear position for yourself and (2) acknowledge the other side. (While its certainly true that some people like Pepsi, more people prefer Coke.)

Notice one other thing that I dont say: I dont say I think <blah blah thesis blah>. I state my thesis as though it is fact and reasonable people surely agree with me. Thats a hallmark of a persuasive essay.

Finally, the first paragraph needs to introduce whatever examples were going to use in the body paragraphs below. Dont launch into the examples fully; that will come later.

Body Paragraphs

You can choose to use either 2 or 3 body paragraphs. (I use 2 body paragraphs, personally. Remember, we just need to be good enough!)

Argument essay:

  • Introduce one flaw
  • Explain why it is a flaw
  • Suggest ways to fix the flaw

Issue essay:

  • Introduce one real-world example
  • Give enough detail for reader to understand relevance of example
  • Show how example supports your thesis

The body of an essay is where we support our thesis statement. For the argument essay, your support will come from the prompt itself: brainstorm several flaws from the argument (try to find the biggest, most glaring flaws). Each flaw gets its own paragraph, so youll need either two or three, depending upon how many body paragraphs you want to write. Explicitly explain why this flaw makes the conclusion less valid in some way, and then discuss how the author might fix that flaw.

For example, lets say that an argument claims that firing half of a companys employees will help the company to reduce costs and therefore become more profitable. While its certainly true that chopping half of your payroll will reduce costs, it doesnt necessarily follow that the company will become more profitable! That loss of personnel may reduce productivity, hurt morale of the remaining employees, and so on. The author of such an argument could bolster the claim by, for example, showing evidence that half of the employees are fully redundant and firing them wouldnt affect the company adversely (if such evidence actually exists, of course!).

For the issue essay, your support will come from your brain: youll have to brainstorm some real-life example (something that actually happened in the past) in order to support your thesis. That example could be something from your own life (work history, school, friend of a friend) or from the broader world (business, history, and so on). Stating that Cokes market share is higher than Pepsis, for example, would bolster your claim that more people prefer Coke.

There is no inherent advantage to a personal example versus a broader world example, but if you use a personal example, be sure to provide enough detail that the reader can understand the relevance. When you use real-world examples that the readers are likely to know, you dont have to worry about, for example, explaining what Coke and Pepsi are.

Finally, make sure to tie your example specifically back to your original thesis. Dont make the reader connect the dots: tell him or her exactly how this example supports your thesis.

Conclusion Paragraph

  • Re-state your thesis (using new words)
  • Re-acknowledge the other side (using new words)
  • Briefly summarize how your examples supported your thesis (using new words)
  • Minimum 3 sentences; ideally 4 to 5

Are you noticing a theme within the above bullet points? Basically, the conclusion paragraph isnt going to contain much new information. Its a conclusion; the major points should already have been made earlier in the essay. What youre doing now is tying everything together in one neat package: yes, the other side has some merit, but heres my point-of-view and, by the way, I proved my case using these examples.

Okay, get to work!

Before you go into the real test, you should have a fully developed template, so that all you have to do is come up with your two examples and your thesis statement, and then hang your words on your framework. Practice with the above as a starting point until you develop something with which youre comfortable. Dont forget to leave some time to proof your essay; its okay to have a few typos, but systematic errors will lower your score.