The big idea: An essay thinks on the page — it explores an idea, develops a line of thought, and carries a distinctive voice that makes you want to follow the argument.
An essay isn't just an opinion — it's a mind working something out.
📝 “We say we value silence. We also cannot sit on a train for four minutes without reaching for a screen. What are we so afraid of hearing?”
Notice the moves: a claim, a contradiction, then a question that opens it up. An essay leads you through a thought. Analyse how it builds.
What to look for
A guiding idea or line of thought
It's exploring one central question or claim, step by step.
A distinctive voice
Thoughtful, witty or provocative — a real mind speaking, not a textbook.
Evidence and examples
It supports ideas with examples, observations or small stories.
Development and turns
It builds — a claim, a complication, a question — rather than repeating one point.
The key move: Ask ‘how does the argument develop, and how does the voice carry me?’ An essay persuades through structure and voice — analyse how the thought unfolds.
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Why it matters in the exam: An essay can appear in Paper 1. Examiners reward you for analysing how the argument develops and how the voice and rhetorical choices engage the reader — not just what the essay concludes.
Analyse this essay opening: “I used to think boredom was the enemy. I spent years killing it. Only now, older, do I see what it was trying to give me.”
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Watch out: Don't just state the essay's conclusion. The marks come from how the thought develops and how the voice carries you — the journey, not the destination.