Educators have spoken, and they say "Essay Writing Wizard iPhone app is a must-have for students."
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Essay App Descriptions
There are currently 300+ essay writing apps that come in several versions. The differences in the versions are the functionalities, features, and services. Each version also has its corresponding English-as-a-Second-Language edition.
Achievers Writing Center is a full-service mobile writing center for college and high school students. Achievers Writing Center apps include live support when you are writing plus editing and review of your finished essay. These apps are for students that want everything from comprehensive essay writing instructions and tutorials to complete live support with essay editing - all for one affordable price.
Achievers Writing Center apps come in four versions - 1) with both Editing and a Personal Writing Assistant, 2) with Personal Writing Assistant only, 3) a LITE version with no Editing or Personal Writing Assistant, and a 4) basic INTRO version.
The MAX apps have every functionality and feature we have ever designed. If you want the top-of-the-line Essay Writing Wizard or ESL Essay Writing app in terms of the maximum number of writing pages and features then get The MAX.
The PRO apps have one less writing page and a few less features than the MAX version.
With the Achievers Writing Center, MAX, or PRO apps, you can develop, organize, and write your entire essay directly on your iPhone or iPod touch.
Each single essay app addresses a different essay type. The power of the essay apps is that each one contains the critical thinking questions, logic guidance, and organizational structure required to write a stellar essay.
The apps even take into account very subtle differences in approach. For example, an evaluation essay can either be personal, in which you evaluate from your personal perspective and beliefs, or the evaluation could involve using one source to evaluate another source. These are different essays; therefore, they are separate apps.
Below are descriptions of the apps. When you receive an essay topic, review this list, and then purchase the one that best helps you write that essay. This list is also inside each app, so you can always see it, if you receive a new essay topic while still finishing another.
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Value-Pac Apps
All Essays Explained (Over 40 essays explained)
Sometimes all you need is a good understanding of what is expected as you write the many different types of essays and papers. When given a particular essay to write, open this app, and under its name you will find a complete explanation of how to think about and organize the essay; how start the essay; what the final product should be like; and, how it should read. There are 40+ types of essays explained, so you will find whatever initial questions you have about any essay answered in this app. If you need more guidance, the specific apps have the very detailed writing step-by-step instructions, writing pages, and revision guidelines, and they can be purchased in the app store. This is for students who want a high-level understanding and overview of the different types of essays.
The Basics (5 apps in 1)
There are four main types of essays; they are Argumentative (Persuasive), Descriptive, Expository (Informative), and Narrative (First and Third Person). This app is a compilation of these essays at a price that is 50% less than if purchased separately in the app store. This app contains all the information from the specialty single apps with the same name. It is five complete apps in one since narrative comprises two separate apps, first and third person.
The Essentials (10 apps in 1)
If you want to purchase just one app, well this is the one to get. It contains, at a 50% discount, all the most assigned essays you will get in school. Every so often, you may want to purchase a specialized essay app, but this app should get you through most writing assignments that are not very specific. You get Approach Paper, Argumentative (Persuasive) Essay, Descriptive Essay, Expository (Informative) Essay, Five-Paragraph Essay, Narrative (First Person), Narrative (Third Person), Reaction (Response) Paper, Teacher's Summary, and Book Report. This is the essay app that will likely come in the handiest for you in school.
Analysis Essays (4 apps in 1)
Analytical writing is both critical and argumentative. It is looking at a source or an issue and explaining what it actually is and finding its strengths, weaknesses, and being critical of both, as warranted. Analysis Essay, Character Analysis, Expository (Informative) Essay, and Historical Analysis are in this app.
College Application (4 apps in 1)
This app includes all the essay guidance needed to complete essays in college applications. Included are Admissions Essay, Scholarship Essay, Opinion Essay, and Narrative (First Person).
College Special (8 apps in 1)
The name says it all. If you are in college, this app will take you a long way. It has all the essays required to write in-depth, logical, and analytical essays for just about any class. It even includes how to write an excellent business cover letter so that you get that summer internship or first job. In this app you receive Analysis Essay, Brainstorming, Business Cover Letter, Cause and Effect, Critical Essay, Deductive Essay, Evaluation (Source vs. Source), and Historical Analysis. Impressing your professor is now easier than you thought!
Community College Edition (10 apps in 1)
Many students attending community college also have full-time jobs or are transitioning between jobs. Therefore, your time has a particular value on it because you have less to devote to schoolwork between a job and job searching. Writing essays and papers tend to be the most time-consuming academic activity simply because of the different stages involved; research, note-taking, idea development, outlining, writing, then revising. It is important to use your time wisely, and the Essay Writing Wizard lets you compose anytime and anywhere. Contained in this app are: Argumentative (Persuasive) Essay, Brainstorming, Business Cover Letter, Descriptive Essay, Evaluation (Source vs. Source), Expository (Informative) Essay, Narrative (First Person), Narrative (Third Person), Process (Non-technical), and Process (Technical).
Creative Writing Value-Pac (6 apps in 1)
This app is for the short story writer. It contains the essay apps necessary to develop a nascent idea into a full-fledged story. Included are Brainstorming, Creative Writing, Descriptive Essay, Narrative (First Person), Narrative (Third Person), and Opinion Essay. Critical Writing (3 apps in 1)
Critiques are excellent ways to test you, the student, to see if you understand material by asking you to find strengths, weaknesses, and dissonance in a source. Book Critique, Movie Critique, and general Critical Essay are in this app.
High School Special (8 apps in 1)
With this app, you will have total control and understanding of the different essay styles and when to use which one. On top of that, the college bound student gets apps to complete the all important college application and the essays associated with applying for scholarships. This app contains College Admissions Essay, College Scholarship Essay, Argumentative Essay, Descriptive Essay, Expository (Informative) Essay, First Person Narrative, Third Person Narrative, and Opinion Essay.
Humanities Major Value-Pac (10 apps in 1)
The humanities, i.e. the study of history for example, tend to focus on evaluation of information and issues from several angles. Some evaluation is strictly historical, some is personal, and some is a little bit of both. You are often asked to critique and answer the question of how you would do things differently (hopefully with the effect of a better outcome). The essays in this app focus on such analysis and the incorporation of your ideas within that analysis. And finally, it is assumed you will be applying for a job at some point. Included are Book Critique, Business Cover Letter, Character Analysis, Creative Writing, Evaluation (Personal), Explanatory (Specific), Exploratory Essay, Historical Analysis, Opinion Essay, and Reaction (Response) Paper.
Middle School Edition (7 apps in 1)
Writing your first set of essays could be a daunting task. The good part is your first essays tend to cover topics and issues that are not very difficult. These allow you to practice developing your writing logic. This edition includes: Biography, Book Report, Choice Essay, Classification Essay, Definition Essay, Five-Paragraph, and Sequence Essay.
My Ideas (9 apps in 1)
This is the most personal of the compilation apps. It focuses on essays types that develop your personal thoughts, feelings, and ideas. The essays apps are Book Critique, Choice Essay, Creative Writing, Evaluation Essay (Personal), Movie Critique, Narrative (First Person), Opinion Essay, Personal Essay, and Reaction (Response) Paper.
SAT + College Application (5 apps in 1)
There is no more important test that a student takes than the SAT. And there is no more important application than the college application. This app contains the instructions needed to complete each of these milestones to the best of your ability. You get College Admissions Essay, College Scholarship Essay, First Person Narrative, Opinion Essay, and SAT Essay.
Science Writing (4 apps in 1)
Technical writing is a different sort of writing, which requires that very specific terms and procedures be explained. However, science writing is not always meant to be consumed by technical people. This app covers the basics such as Deductive Essay, Cause and Effect Essay, Expository (Informative) Essay, and Process Essay. These essays, while scientific in nature, show how to write to be read by non-science people.
Success Bound (10 apps in 1)
It is important to have dreams and also the ambition to achieve those dreams. Writing is the second most important way that we communicate and perfecting that skill goes a long way to ensuring your success. You will stand out if you write well; especially, beginning with your college application. This value-pac contains: College Admissions Essay, Argumentative (Persuasive) Essay, Business Cover Letter, Descriptive Essay, Expository (Informative) Essay, Narrative (First Person), Narrative (Third Person), Opinion Essay, SAT Essay, and College Scholarship Essay.
Summary Essays (3 apps in 1)
Summaries are great ways to study and are often used by teachers to test what you know about a subject or an issue. This app contains Reader's Summary, Specific Audience Summary, and Teacher's Summary.
Technical College Edition (5 apps in 1)
Writing is also a crucial part of the technical fields. Those who eventually lead development teams and run software companies are also excellent communicators and writers. Help yourself stand out by impressing your professor and your employer (if you have a part-time job as well) with good writing skills and clarity of your ideas. This app has: Analysis Essay, Business Cover Letter, Deductive Essay, Explanatory (Specific), and Process Essay (Technical).
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Analysis Essay
The analytical essay app breakdowns, scrutinizes, and deciphers the reasons behind an issue. An analytical study is structured upon provable, defensible empirical data, and follows a logical fact-building order. Use this app for an assignment that asks why and how. For example, how was the foundation of Europe changed by the defeat of Germany in World War Two? Or, why did the creation of a national currency bode well for the economic development of the United States?
Approach Paper
An approach paper is a general overall summary for a book, play, or article. However, it is adaptable to any source such as a speech and an interview on YouTube. The purpose is to show your command of the source material, and that you can write adeptly using varied sentence structure to say a lot in as few sentences as possible. Writing with brevity is the operative goal. There is a specific format with several rules to follow in terms of vocabulary and use of descriptive passages.
Argumentative (Persuasive) Essay
An argumentative essay is an exercise in reasoning, with the goal of persuading the audience that your ideas are valid ones. Valid does not mean bulletproof or immune to rebuttal. The audience, most likely, will be critical of what you write. However, a good argumentative essay guides the audience through the journey of your "reasoning." It educates, stimulates, and maybe even convinces others that your ideas have much merit.
Biography
A biography defines, develops, and puts meaning to an individual's life. Specifically, a biography places perspective on the impact a person's life has had on society, the world, or even humanity. It is not simply a description of what a person did, but more an analysis of a person's actions. For example, use this app to describe the characteristics of Napoleon that helped make him a great leader, and to examine his impact on French society and the development of French nationalism.
Book Report
A book report is a summarized, condensed version of a book, from your perspective. Written in an expository style with many descriptive paragraphs, it is heavily dependent on your accuracy with vocabulary. It is not a critique or a full analysis. The goal is to honestly represent the book. It is your explanation of the storyline, characters, scenery, and the moral/purpose. Your report is made unique based on what actions and character relationships are highlighted. However, the true test is whether your audience, after reading, has a good understanding of the book.
Brainstorming - An Idea, A Topic, An Issue, In Search of an Idea
Brainstorming is an organized, systematic way to harness your ideas and thoughts into usable packets of information. These packets are further arranged to solve a problem or to create something new. This thinking process is useful because there is so much information in your brain that a filter system is required. Brainstorming occurs on several levels: a general idea, a specific issue, a topic, and there are times when you need to create an idea out of seemingly nothing. In reference to writing an essay, brainstorming helps you develop what you should think about BEFORE beginning an essay. Use it before writing about something that you never really thought of before or if you are unsure of what you think.
Business Cover Letter
Writing a cover letter, while seemingly simple, requires some difficult decisions to be taken before it is effective in landing the job of your choice. This app guides you through the processes of thinking about what you want to say, explains how to best say it, and shows you how to put it together into a standout cover letter. It is recommended that you read the Overview prior to beginning.
Cause and Effect Essay
The cause and effect app defines and attempts to determine if there exists a direct action relationship between two or more observed conditions. A direct action relationship is an active relationship. This means one action (Action A) affects and causes another action (Action B) to occur. Clarity of action is important. The goal is to prove that Action B cannot occur precisely the same way without Action A. Use this app if asked to examine, for example, "What evidence exists showing that smoking one pack of cigarettes a day for ten years causes lung cancer?"
Character Analysis
The character analysis app describes and develops the behavioral, personality, and character traits of a character in a book, short story, play, or movie. It involves looking at specific actions and places those actions in context of the character's motives and intent. The effect on others is also described and explained. A character analysis can also apply to a group. A group acts often as one body and it can have a core set of beliefs. It can also be responsible for definable actions, much like an individual character.
Choice Essay
There are times where there is nothing more difficult than choosing between two or more activities or items that you really like. The same can happen between two things about which you do not know anything. The choice essay is a window into how and why you took a particular decision. It is your argument for taking one decision and your argument for rejecting another. The choice essay is an opinion and analytical essay rolled into one that uses your personal reasons and opinions, as the critical pieces of evidence. Your reasoning and choices can be subjective and based on whatever you want. After all, it is your choice. Your main goal is to write, so that the audience clearly understands your arguments and the process used to arrive at your decision.
Classification Essay
A classification essay is a different way of writing a definition. Instead of defining a term individually, the classification essay defines terms in relationship to others in a group. These groups are called categories, and they have similarities (or sometimes differences) that allow them to "work together" to further a common goal, ideal, or action. The categories are well-defined, key in on the overall objective, and focus specifically on how, as a group, the objective is enhanced or furthered. There is not always a hard objective to be achieved, but the result is the same - your classification defines something that the terms have in common.
College Admissions Essay
The college admissions essay is best described as a very goal-directed personal essay. The topic is given on the application, and it is your job to answer from a personal perspective. The goals are three fold: 1) to show that you can interpret an essay topic and write coherently about it, 2) to demonstrate a command of the English language and the ability to communicate, and 3) to give the college insight into your character and personal philosophy. The key is to tie all this into explaining why going to that college will advance you as a person and how the college will benefit from having you attend.
College Scholarship Essay
College scholarship committees that require an essay usually base their decisions on criteria other than just grades. These committees are actually assessing whether or not you will, in the future, advance their ideals and objectives. Most students apply for scholarships from groups with which they have a sense of affinity or allegiance. Your goals are three fold: 1) to show that, in the past, you exhibited behavior consistent with that organization's philosophy, 2) that their scholarship will help advance your learning further about these ideals, followed by, hopefully, 3) you actively advancing that organization's agenda or purpose.
Compare and Contrast
The comparative essay compares and contrasts the similarities and differences between two or more issues, events, or ideas. A comparison can be done on several different levels such as between philosophies, ideas, morals, laws, religions, and even personalities. For example, use this app to compare the philosophies of Plato and Aristotle or to compare the environmental laws of the United States and China.
Creative Writing
The creative writing app develops the imagination. After all, that is what defines the assignment; it is your imagination telling a story. A creative writing assignment requires the creation and development of scenery, characters, and the interaction between scenery and characters. Use this app for an English composition assignment where you are asked to recreate an actual event or to write a fictional story.
Critical Essay
The critical essay evaluates the main ideas, points, and arguments made by an author or a lecturer. After the initial evaluation, everything is empirically judged. Above all, the critique is based on fact. It requires hard evidence. A critique is very specific and uses strong arguments, irrespective of the positions taken. It is an expository (informative) style essay, so one goal is to hopefully give your audience some new insight that it may not have had before.
Critique - Book or Novel
A critique of a novel or book is an essay of what you think about it. You address several aspects such as character development, plot, and the overriding theme or moral. It is based on your reactions and subsequent analysis. Skimming a book or reading the cliff notes will not help write a good critique. You need to actually read the book and get in-depth knowledge of the characters and their relationships in relation to the plot.
Critique - Movie
Movie critiques are unique in that they require comparing and juxtaposing your reactions based on multiple senses. Reading a novel is mainly a thinking exercise. A movie, on the other hand, is much more than words. There are visuals, sounds, spoken words, and action from the characters. How you react profoundly affects your like or dislike for a movie. The movie critique requires that many sensory elements are brought together and written about coherently.
Deductive Essay
A deductive essay is the equivalent of a verbal math problem. If 1 + 1 = 2 in math, then in a deductive essay 1 (the premise) + 1 (the evidence) = 2 (the conclusion). Approach the essay in that methodical a fashion and it will come out well and the answer should be dependable. Aside from the math analogy, this is still an essay and the strength of it is the logical reasoning path laid out from paragraph to paragraph. In many ways, it is similar to an analytical essay and is often used, as a test, to see if you understand how to use specific information. There are three main parts to a deductive essay, and this app walks you through each part.
Definition Essay
There are some essays that seem so easy that you know there must be a trick somewhere. The definition essay could fall into that category. How hard could it be to define something? OK, think of a definition for a car. What would you say for a bicycle and a surfboard? We read an essay once where they were defined as the same thing; they are modes of transportation. That was an easy one. How about a definition for patriotism? It sounds easy until one tries to put it into simple words. This app helps define terms and phrases and in the process possibly gives deeper insight into what you think and believe.
Descriptive Essay
You have probably heard the term "a picture speaks a thousand words." It is much easier to show someone a picture than try to describe it. Pictures are difficult to describe because a majority of the information that we process comes through our eyes, not our ears. A descriptive essay is an attempt to mimic/recreate a picture, using words. It employs carefully chosen, appropriate vocabulary and literary techniques to develop imagery and "three dimensional" images in the readers' minds. A picture also "flows" together. Two separate pictures of a mountain range and the sun are quite different than one picture of the sun setting behind a mountain range. A descriptive essay should be able to illuminate, with words and sentence structure, the beauty of the sun and mountain together in the one picture. This complex, high level of description also applies to characters and storyline.
Evaluation Essay - Personal
Being evaluated is sometimes an uncomfortable situation if we are unaware of the standards being used. The evaluation essay takes the mystery out of such situations. Specific criteria are used to judge if something has achieved certain ideals/standards. In a personal evaluation essay, you develop the criteria based on your beliefs, morals, opinions, and sources that you choose. It is best written in the first person narrative and reaches a conclusion, as to whether you think compliance is achieved.
Evaluation Essay - Source versus Source
Being evaluated is sometimes an uncomfortable situation if we are unaware of the standards being used. The evaluation essay takes the mystery out of such situations. Specific criteria are used to judge if something has achieved certain ideals/standards. In a 'source versus source' evaluation, one source (the evaluated source) is evaluated based on the standards laid out in another source (the criteria-defining source). It is written in the expository style and reaches a conclusion, as to whether compliance is achieved.
Explanatory Essay - General
This app guides you in writing a general explanatory essay for your teacher, classmates, or study group. The purpose is to explain why and how something has happened or, in the case of current events, why and how something is happening. There is an old saying that students understand everything, until asked to write it down. To be fair, this applies to everyone. Thinking about something is easy; writing about the same thing is many times harder. An assignment that asks you to "Explain what compelled the colonists to get on little ships and move to the New World" is a good candidate for this app.
Explanatory Essay - Specific
This app is about writing an explanatory essay for a specific audience that may not have the same level of understanding or access to information, as you. The purpose is to explain why and how something happens or is happening. The key is deciding, which details are worth explaining and, which are not. The details chosen depend on your audience and what the essay is to accomplish. An example assignment that would use this app is "Pretend a new family moved to your town from China. Explain to them how the President of the United States is elected."
Exploratory Essay
An exploratory essay could be described as similar to jumping into an unknown lake with both feet, not knowing what you are going to find or hit at the bottom. It is the equivalent of searching a newly discovered forest. While not a blind search, it is also not very pointed one. An exploratory essay is the exploration of an idea, concept, or an issue. Where it leads, even you do not know, but the end result is the audience and you know more about the subject. There is no hypothesis to answer, and when writing the introduction, there is no thesis statement. However, this can make the job of writing a bit tougher. Without the usual essay structure, it is important to really organize the information, so that the audience has a tangible learning curve. The goal is the audience and you are more informed about the subject - informed enough to know how to go out and do more pointed investigation.
Expository (Informative) Essay
Expository writing is one of the most common forms of writing. It is also, from a teaching perspective, the most useful. Therefore, it is found in everything from newspaper articles to textbooks to research papers. An expository essay teaches, informs, or explains one topic. It relies on facts, figures, quotes, and analyses to develop its arguments. The more reliable the information (use of multiple sources, for example) and the sharper, more refined the analyses, the more credibility the essay has with the audience. This app directs in writing a solid expository essay.
Five-Paragraph Essay
The five-paragraph essay is the standard middle school and high school essay format. Its short length requires concise writing, avoidance of unnecessary words, and being direct and to the point. Each paragraph has a very specific job, since adding or deleting a paragraph is not an option. Most students go wrong in the five-paragraph essay before they even begin writing because they do not take the time to fully understand the assignment. The first part of this app focuses on learning how to understand your assignments, so that your writing time is well spent.
Historical Analysis Essay
A historical analysis essay defines, examines, and explains the impact a historical event or a person has had in shaping an organization, a country, or maybe even the world. Historical analyses are always supported by empirical evidence. For example, you could use this app to develop a paper on the role and impact of Roman civilization on the development of modern day Democracy.
Narrative - First Person
One of the most personal and useful things you do is share stories. This is the main way we learn from each other. Sharing adventures or ideas carries an innate bias; the audience is hearing only your perspective and viewpoint. Whatever biases you have are instinctively passed along. Writing in the first person narrative is similar. It is telling a story from your (the "I") perspective, and the reader experiences events through your eyes, feelings, reactions, and interpretations. This powerful literary tool gives a deep connection with your audience. However, it can present some limitations to your storytelling. An assignment that asks you to "Describe the first time you remember getting lost as a child" is a good topic for this app.
Narrative - Third Person
An excellent mystery novel can be very illustrative of the third person narrative. You, the audience, know everything (well, at least, everything the author wants you to know) about each character. In most cases, you possess more information than the characters know about each other, and that makes the novel "interactive" and exciting. There is enough information to think ahead, predict, be afraid for a character, and even wish you could tell a character about the danger waiting in the next room. The third person narrative allows for intricate and multiple character development, which is more difficult in the first person narrative. Multiple sub-plots are also more easily woven. For example, use the third person narrative if asked to "Describe how your family reacted to the tornado." There are many stories within that one story.
Opinion Essay
The opinion essay defines and develops your beliefs and positions on just about any subject or issue. Your opinion is very personal, but being personal does not mean lacking credibility, substance, or supporting evidence. This essay organizes the substance and reasons behind your thoughts and ideas. For example, an assignment that asks "What do you think are the roles of alternative fuels and clean air laws in the preservation of the environment? Do they help or hurt the cause of environmental protection?" is a good candidate for this app.
Personal Essay
A personal essay explains events in your life. It is also used to explain your ideas, values, and personal philosophy. The topic of personal essays is often, intentionally, open-ended. This app is used to write about serious issues such as what your religion means to you. It can also address more external issues such as why you like your neighborhood. The range is as wide as your personal experiences. The essay is to inform and teach the audience something about you.
Process Essay - Non-technical
The process essay describes the steps involved in doing something. It could be as simple as how to make a certain chemical in a lab or the steps involved in passing a constitutional amendment. Process essays can be technical or non-technical. When the subject is more scientific in nature, it may include terms and procedures that require a short glossary as an appendix. This avoids the reader from having to use a separate reference to look up new words while reading. If the topic is technical, we recommend choosing the technical, science-related process essay app instead, as that one is tailored to a more technical format. Select and use this version if your topic is more humanities-related.
Process Essay - Technical, science-related
The process essay, from a science perspective, is a technical paper. While it has a basic essay format, there are sections where it reads like a lab report or research paper. It does tend to use less technical language overall and employ more normal descriptive language that the average reader understands. Additionally, it is usually more holistic in its approach to the subject matter. The process is described from a broad perspective, not from a narrow research-type perspective. The overall result is an essay that describes a complex scientific process in terms that a non-science person understands. It is still very scientific, but appeals to a larger audience, and is often used to "interest" others in science by being more "enjoyable" to read. Use this app when addressing a serious scientific process to a non-science audience.
Reaction (Response) Paper
Why and how you react (respond) to something is often beyond your control. Also, it is not always immediately obvious or clear why you react (respond) in certain ways. You just know you do. To decipher the possible reasons requires more study and introspection. A reaction (response) paper defines and details, from multiple angles, how a book, film, speech, article, or particular experience initially affected you. It involves asking many questions and supplying very specific descriptions. A response paper is not a critique, an evaluation, analysis, or a history of the source. It is only about your initial reaction.
SAT Essay
The SAT Essay is a very specific type of writing with its own rules and format. This app teaches the thinking, organizing, and writing process of the five-paragraph SAT essay. Before beginning a practice essay, we recommend reading the Essay Overview, so that you have a good understanding of what is expected.
Sequence Essay
Sequence essay assignments range from "Explain the events that made you move here" to "Explain why Ukraine has not been accepted into the NATO alliance." Note the range of intellectual responses required. The first topic is best written in the first person narrative and may involve your Dad or Mom being in the military. The second topic requires some serious research and study of various governments and their policies. Alternatively, it is better written in the third person narrative. Another assignment could be to "Describe the sequence of events that produce topsoil." This is science-related, but it is still a sequence. One aspect that all sequence essays have in common is easy-to-follow logic. Readers should come away with 1) an understanding of the sequence and 2) enough additional knowledge, so if later it is learned part of the sequence has changed, then they can predict the new outcome. Write an essay where the readers successfully predict the effect of internal changes to the sequence and you would have done a great job.
Summary Essays - Reader's, Specific Audience, and Teacher's Summary
A summary essay, depending on why it is written, serves multiple purposes. It is excellent for supplementing your class notes (reader's summary), is proof to your teacher that you really understand certain material such as a chapter in a textbook (teacher's summary), and is effective in teaching or informing a particular audience with minimal word use (specific audience summary). The main differences between these summaries are 1) the level and types of detail presented, which are totally determined by the audience's knowledge base and 2) what you want the summary to accomplish. They are much shorter in length than the original source and are written to be easy reads, irrespective of the complexity of the information.
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