 |
|
 |
|
Student Tutorials
An Evaluation Essay assesses the object of study and induces the reader to agree with the writer's point of view. Evaluation essay is somewhat similar to the cause and effect essays, except for considering no cause-and-effect relations. Evaluation involves pondering over the text, actions or events and is not limited to books and articles only.
Write Essays
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
Essay Types
- Admission
- Argumentative
- Case study
- Cause and Effect
- Classification
- Contrast and Comparison
- Concept
- Creative
- Critical
- Deductive
- Definition
- Descriptive
- Evaluation
- Explication
- Exploratory
- Expository
- Free writing
- Five Paragraph
- Illustrative
- Informal
- Instruction
- Interview
- Literary
- Narrative
- Observation
- Personal
- Persuasive
- Position
- Problem-Solution
- Process
- Reflection
- Research
- Response
- Review
- Scholarship
- Study Project
- Traditional
- Wiki
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
Writing Samples
The railroad was of extreme importance to the US economic, political and social growth in the XIX century. Without it, the USA would certainly not develop into an industrialized nation it is now. The US started to engage in railroad building in 1827, when the merchants of Baltimore, Maryland chartered the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad which opened in 1830. One should remember that during the same year the first US passenger regular train service began in Charleston, SC. Railroads spread rapidly in the eastern and southern states in the early 1800s. By the 1850s, track linked the Atlantic seaboard to the Midwest. By as early as 1869, the east and west coast were connected by the first transcontinental route
Essay Samples
|
|
|
|
|
|
Plagiarism tips for students
Taking into account that according to our statistics roughtly 10% of Students in the USA use Custom Writing Services on a periodic basis (not regularly), many professors use 'bluffing' as a powerful tool of detecting potential cheaters.
How they do it
Basically, if they see that the paper was exceptionally well-written (which is not what this student did in the past) they accuse him or her of plagiarism. Certainly, they are smart enough not to openly accuse them of plagiarism (as such statements can be used against professors or schools in court) but rather say that the paper "caught their attention", looks "suspiciously good", or "may not be properly referenced". They can ask you how much time you spent writing the paper and preparing the research, what libraries you visited and whether anyone helped you with the paper.
The number of such statements and their construction is limited only by the mental abilities of a professor. If you look at them-they are innocent by nature and simple by structure. The primary goal is to make you feel insecure and uncertain about your paper and your immediate future.
If the student immediately accepts the wrong-doing he/she will be punished since it is a university policy to punish the cheaters. If the student rejected all accusations the only way to prove that he was cheating is to show the sources from which he plagiarized.
Presumption of Innocence
The only way you can be accused of plagiarism is if you say you plagiarized or if they show you the sources from which you plagiarized. After all, plagiarism is about copying someone's thoughts, ideas and information. To prove that plagiarism has taken place you have to show that these thoughts, ideas, and information existed before you wrote the paper. Even if you do not remember much about your paper, you can still call it "impact of stress caused by professor's suspicion" or that "you are too tired to remember things now after the past 3 nights writing the paper".
Do not fall for professor's bluffing, please! Remember, Bill Clinton did not admit anything and the whole process took long enough for him to finish his term. Time is your friend, too. Ask them to show you the sources from which you plagiarized. It is the only valid proof!
If you admit--you are finished as the rest will be done according to school policies and procedures which will badly impact your grade and career. If you DO NOT admit things you are requesting your professor to spend resources (spare time, energy) to find something and at some point of time they give up doing things they are not paid for.
Personal Recommendation
I personally recommend you not to admit anything and ask your professor to show you the sources from which the paper was plagiarized. You'll be surprised when they will not find any.
|
|