Add to My Yahoo!
RSS Feeds
Deutsch
English
Step-by-Step Guide to Efficient Comparison Essay Writing
Category: Education
Article added by: camilla bartlett


E-Mail Article
Print Article

The comparison and contrast essay is one of the most frequent tasks of a student’s scholastic essay writing life. In this form of narrative, students have to measure and evaluate the similarities and differences of two or more subjects. It can be about specific objects, events, conflicts, organizations, ideas, or people. Whichever is the case, the goal remains clear: comparison essays are favored by instructors as it readily hones the comprehension, critical, and argumentative skills of their students.

But before you get further encouraged and start comparing subjects aimlessly, you must first undergo a number of essential steps to ensure that your associations are leading to a centered comparison essay. Here are five step-by-step guides in drafting your way into an efficient comparison and contrast essay.

Step 1: Describe your subjects individually and independently

Before you can properly make a comparison or contrast, you must first be fully acquainted with each of your subjects. Achieve this by writing down everything you know and everything you’ve researched about your two subjects on separate papers. Do not trouble yourself yet with pinpointing their similarities and differences as that would come at a later time. Write down everything you know and turn off your internal editor for a while.

Step 2: Create an indiscriminate list of similarities and differences

Once you’re finished with the descriptions, make a list on the similarities of your subjects. Afterward, make another list on a separate paper that focuses this time on the differences between the two. Carry this out indiscriminately and mechanically, as the goal is to come up with an objective list of likeness and clashes.

Step 3: Evaluate

Assess all your objective tasks. Examine your listings and pin down the aspects that are baffling, unanticipated, and seemingly conflicting. Briefly write down why these points stir up such reactions from you. There must be something that’s thought-provoking from your list as such ideas will act as the focal points of a comparison essay.

Step 4: Get critical

Armed with the stimulating points you gathered, it is now time to get reflective and critical. Ask yourself the probable causes of these similarities and differences. And following these causes, establish the probable effects it can give to your subjects and their environments. Dig deeper by determining what these parallelisms and disparities can tell about the subjects and our society as a whole.

Step 5: Put forward a provocative problem

Give something to your readers that will make them care about your comparison essay. What is the relevance of all this comparisons? You must put forward the major conflicts you discovered in your comparisons, discuss it thoroughly with your analyses, and then close it with a "solution” or your own personal point of view.

Comparison essays are not only effective means to assess your essay writing capability, it is also a means of detecting how well you can objectively compare and contrast subjects, how detailed and profound you are in analyzing research, and how efficient you can be in defending your point of views.


Posted By: camilla bartlett
Contact: e-mail


About the Author:
25-year-old Camilla Bartlett is a new middle school teacher in a public school in New Jersey. She’s especially fond of her fifth graders, but conceals it under a heap of essay writing assignments. When free from her schoolwork, she works on her book that deals with enhancing one’s creative writing skills.


Another articles posted by camilla bartlett: