Viewing entries in
SAT Essay

SAT Essay Tip:  Tape a Cheetah to Your Back

SAT Essay Tip: Tape a Cheetah to Your Back

Tape a Cheetah to Your Back

Even with great examples, it’s difficult to finish a long essay in 25 minutes. Getting off to a quick start is crucial. Make it your goal to finish the intro in the first five minutes. Work urgently. No lollygagging. Tape a cheetah to your back. Be like a fighter jet catapulted off an aircraft carrier not like a commercial plane taxiing down a runway. You get the idea.

Your 3-Sentence Introduction

So how do you write a quick and effective intro? First, don’t get hung up on crafting a clever hook. The intro only needs to accomplish three things: state your position, state why, list your examples. Three sentences and you’re done. As with all things, practice makes perfect so find some sample prompts online and practice writing a few five minute intros. You’ll find that as you get better at it, you’ll be able to add little touches of sophistication to the template.

Sample Prompt and Intro

Sample Intro: "Has the emphasis on individualism in our society caused people to forget the importance of belonging to a community?"

Sample Prompt: "The emphasis on individualism in society has not caused people to forget the importance of belonging to a community. Focusing on individual actions actually reinforces the idea that individuals cannot thrive apart from community. This trend is evident in the Puritan community of The Scarlet Letter and in the virtual community of Facebook."

Phil

2 Tips for Writing the SAT Essay

Tip #1: More is Better than Less

The SAT essay graders are just like the girl in the commercial: they want more, they want more. You get two pages, and you have to fill as much of those two pages as you can in 25 minutes. To accomplish that without sounding repetitive and disorganized takes knowing a few simple tips and a little practice.

Tip #2: Prepare Good Examples Ahead of Time

What’s better, the Gettysburg Address or the speech you wrote when you ran for class treasurer? There’s a reason Spielberg made a movie about Abraham Lincoln and not about you. It’s not complicated.

And neither is the SAT essay. Most students use a personal experience (such as their experience giving a speech) to support their position. Using a personal experience as an example should actually be your last resort because in general it’s the least impressive type of example.

The first step to writing a great essay in 25 minutes is to come up with examples beforehand. Your examples are like tools in a tool chest. Just like you wouldn’t go to a repair job without a set of tools, you shouldn’t go to write an essay without a set of examples. By the way, not knowing the prompt ahead of time isn’t a problem because the topics on the SAT are broad.

So what are good examples? The directions say, “Support your position with reasoning and examples taken from your reading, studies, experience, or observations.” In other words, you can use essentially anything. But for breadth and sophistication, I recommend preparing two examples from history, literature and current events, and if you’re knowledgeable about an elective, art for example, you can throw that in as well. Pick examples you find interesting or already know a lot about. Memorize some important names and dates associated with each example so you can include specifics in your essay and sound erudite.

A word of caution: You might be tempted to change your examples on the fly after you see a prompt because you thought of the perfect example for the prompt. Don’t do it. Stick to your pre-prepared examples. If you try to use an example you haven’t prepared, you’ll find that you will quickly run out of things to say.

Phil