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Persuasive
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The definition of a persuasive essay is an essay that seeks to persuade the reader to adopt the writer’s perspective on a certain topic.  Persuasive essays may also be known as argumentative essays.  They differ from descriptive essays or even compare and contrast essays in that persuasive essays encourage the reader to adopt a position by the conclusion of the essay.

To write a persuasive essay, it is important for the writer to clearly take a position on the topic.  You want your reader not only to understand that you have taken a position, but to be convinced by your reasoning that your position is the correct one. 

To build a great persuasive essay, the writer needs to establish a clear-cut argument for his or her position.  Usually, the format to do this involves introducing the topic and the position, and then going into detail about the supporting arguments.  A good persuasive argument needs at least three supporting arguments to really explain why the writer’s position is the one the reader should choose. 

The tools necessary for a persuasive essay are logic, reasoning, and addressing the other side of the argument.  All of the supporting arguments need to contain internal logic, but they also need to logically support the writer’s thesis statement or opinion on the topic.  Sometimes, it might even be helpful to use a logic tree to ensure that your supporting arguments are well-reasoned and all support your thesis statement. 

The best way to learn how to write a great persuasive essay is to read persuasive essays on a variety of topics.  We have included some persuasive essay examples to help you familiarize yourself with the genre.  

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus
¶ … Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus" by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley and "Dracula" by Bram Stoker. Specifically it will compare and contrast the two texts. These two stories were written over 70 years apart, and…
Essay Doctorate
Perception and on the Circumstance That Selective
The following essay focuses on selective perception and on the circumstance that selective perception may be more dominated by images than by any other factor. We are prone to making impressions, yet as the study in this essay shows it may be images that subconsciously form our impressions and direct judgment to be made about them accordingly. All too often, selective perception gets us into difficulties as witnessed by the Northwest Airlines Flight 259 that crashed after forgetting to extend the flaps for takeoff. This was as minor aspect, yet the pilots completely overlooked it. Selective perception works in social areas of life too where people are regularly hired for certain characteristics that employers observe yet gloss over others. Research shows that much of causal perceptions or interview selection is made of fleeting instinctive impressions where discrete components are aggregated into a holistic whole. This is called a stereotype and stereotypes are instinctive, unconscious, and often difficult to reverse. They direct many of our judgments, for good and for bad, and drive our attention in a specific direction
Paper Doctorate
Learning communities: structure, implementation, and impact
Creating Thriving Learning Communities for Our Future
Research Paper Undergraduate
The return of Martin Guerre
Identity Theft in 16th Century Provincial France: Natalie Zemon Davis' the Return of Martin Guerre
Paper Undergraduate
Kennedy True Compass Book Review
The main focus of True Compass is Edward Kennedy's biography. It starts with his early upbringing in a house full of wealth, influence, and politics and details all the way through Kennedy's early military training and…
Paper Undergraduate
President Obama\'s Nobel Peace Prize
¶ … President Obama's Nobel Peace Prize Acceptance Speech
Paper Undergraduate
Leadership Film Project: Dead Poets
"Carpe Diem, boys! Seize the day! Make your lives extraordinary." The image of Robin William's teacher in the film Dead Poets Society (1989) has become an iconic representation of what a good teacher should resemble:…
Research Paper Doctorate
Guns, germs and steel: the fates of human societies
Jared Diamond's book - Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies won the Pulitzer Prize, the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, the Rhone-Poulenc Prize and the Commonwealth club of California's Gold Medal.
Paper Undergraduate
Green, N. (2006). \"Everyday Life
Green, N. (2006). "Everyday life in distance education: Case studies with three families in Queensland, Australia." Retrieved via Proquet's Dissertations & Theses database (AAT NR13979).
Research Paper Doctorate
Love and Society in Shakespearean Comedy
Shakespearean Social Comedy -- Saturnalian inversion or soulful exploration of social outsiders?