<p>SO..I'm really bad at writing essays, can someone please help me how to write good essays within a time limit, with explicit theses and good transitions etc?
For example, i have write 3 essays 40 min each for the AP world history test?</p>
<p>dump a ton of info in there.</p>
<p>transitions are easy. </p>
<p>sample question: from X thousand BC to Y million AD, how did "blah" affect "stuff"?</p>
<p>thesis: from X to Y, the "blah" affected "stuff" in "one", "two", and "three" ways.</p>
<p>topic sentence 1: "Stuff" was affected in "ONE" way.</p>
<p>------->list the ways. explain the impact of each way (the "so what?")</p>
<p>topic sentence 2: BESIDES "ONE" AFFECTING "STUFF", "TWO" also affected stuff.</p>
<p>------->list the ways. explain the impact of each way (the "so what?")</p>
<p>topic sentence 3: (and finally), ANOTHER FACTOR THAT IMPACTED "STUFF" IN ADDITION TO "ONE" AND "TWO" WAS "THREE".</p>
<p>------->list the ways. explain the impact of each way (the "so what?")</p>
<p>lol seems a little sketchy i guess, but it worked for me last year. i always got 9's in class and a 5 on the actual test. i never ever wrote an intro or a conclusion. just a thesis, and then i dived right into the good stuff, generally consisting of an extreme amount of word vomitting of facts. just put down everything you know, even if you aren't sure it's right cuz you aren't penalized for wrong info, only awarded points for the right stuff.</p>
<p>and make sure to do some analysis...don't worry if it sounds ludicrous, just make it sound credible with a really authoritative, "i know what i'm talking about" tone. be confident in yourself!</p>
<p>^hahaha </p>
<p>looks like someone is well-versed in the prestigious, occult art of "bs-ing"...</p>