How I Wrote An Academic Essay For The First Time Or

I graduated with my first MSc… well… more than 15 years ago. For some strange reason, every six years or so, I have an urge to study something new. So, after six years of successfully building my career in sales and marketing, I went on to receive an MBA in London. Now, six and a bit years later, I am finding myself busy with the third, part-time Master’s degree, while working full-time and volunteering on weekends. After a combined 7 years of postgraduate education, for the first time, I am faced with the challenge of writing an essay. My first degree was in natural sciences, taught in a post-Soviet education system that was famous for quite tough and heavily theoretical content. Mathematical formulas were my friends at exams; I didn’t forge the same bond with words, except for the limited amount needed to explain ‘physical meaning’ or mathematical proof. I did write quite a lengthy dissertation at the end, with a lot of charts showing experimental results and an overview of existing research on the subject.

And many references — about 100 of them, if I remember correctly (the referencing style I used was one of many styles using footnotes, as I discovered recently). My MBA programme was more human science but quite a practical degree, with little words required during exams. This is how I ended up in my third Masters program with no experience in essay writing whatsoever. And, to affirm worst fear, I discovered on the first day that this would be the main method of assessment in my course. Here I am, at a point in life where others go through a midlife crisis or decide to take up an eccentric hobby, learning how to write an essay and reference in Harvard style. The first challenge was to understand what essay topic was about. Talking to my tutor helped to clarify what exactly it meant. Scientific background helped, in the sense that it helped me structure the approach of writing and the outline of the essay itself.

Research seemed an obvious first step, and I did a lot of it at the start of my essay: I read a few books and journal articles and made some notes on particular parts or pages to reference later. However, I later realized, I should’ve done more of this. I noticed too late that quite a few important pieces were missing page numbers and quotes, as I was not approaching my initial readings with an ‘essay-tuned’ mind. Next time I will vow to take a more structured approach to my reading, as most texts on the subject will be relevant to an essay — at least that’s how my course is laid out. I haven’t built my bibliography in advance either because I knew I could rely on RefME to do it for me. The assumption was right — RefME formatted everything for me in a correct style, including inline citations. Having missed this bit, I had to go back to my books quite a few times, adding to my work-load and heightening my stress-level. Some distant school-writing memories came back to remind me that I needed an essay plan.

Previous study experience seems to have made me slightly wiser (finally!) in regards to time management — I blocked time on a weekend dedicated solely to writing. Ok, half of this time was probably spent on something else, but at least I started — this is always the hardest first step for me. I thought things through and wrote down a clear and structured plan. Having a plan for my essay helped a lot. My worry was that it would evolve multiple times while writing, but it never did. So it was a good plan! The first two points of my plan were a struggle: it took me over 3 hours to nail them. However, the rest of my arguments fell into place, once my structure was clear and tested, and I finished my essay in about 10 hours in total. I then spent an extra 2 hours going back and forth to fill in missing pieces of information, like book pages and quotes, but RefME saved me another couple of hours of pure reference formatting. If you never used or forgot how to use it, here is a bunch of useful information and videos (RefME, no date). Collective knowledge about essay writing is collected in a neat step-by-step guide in WikiHow (WikiHow to write a research essay, no date). 1. Make sure you understand essay topic! 3. Make time for writing — block it on your calendar, free from parties/events/other things. 5. Tune your mind — if you need extra two hours just to start writing — that’s what you need! P.S. When do you think I did referencing for this? After I’ve finished it! RefME (2015) How can I save quotes on the WebClipper while citing an online source? RefME (no date) Educator resources quick style guide.

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