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Syllabus /School /Class 7 /english /Essay Writing

Essay Writing

What you'll learn

  • Structure an essay with introduction, body paragraphs, and conclusion
  • Distinguish between descriptive, narrative, argumentative, and expository essays
  • Write a body paragraph using the PEEL model
  • Use linking words to create coherence between ideas

Key concepts

What is an Essay?

An essay is a piece of writing on a single topic. Unlike a story, it is organised around ideas and arguments, not events. A good essay has a clear structure, focused paragraphs, and evidence or examples to support every claim.


The 3-Part Essay Structure

Part 1 — Introduction

The introduction does three things:

  1. Hook — grab the reader's attention (question, fact, quote, or dramatic statement)
  2. Background — briefly introduce the topic
  3. Thesis statement — state your main idea or argument in one sentence

Example introduction (topic: Importance of Reading): "Can a single book change your life? Many of the world's greatest leaders say yes. Reading is not merely a school activity — it is a lifelong habit that builds vocabulary, imagination, and critical thinking. This essay argues that reading should be made a daily priority for every student."


Part 2 — Body Paragraphs

Each paragraph develops one main idea. Use the PEEL model:

LetterStands forWhat to write
PPointThe main idea of the paragraph (one sentence)
EEvidenceA fact, statistic, or example that supports the point
EExplanationHow the evidence proves the point
LLinkConnect back to the thesis or introduce the next paragraph

Worked PEEL Paragraph: P: Reading expands a student's vocabulary significantly. E: Studies show that students who read for 20 minutes daily encounter up to 1.8 million words per year. E: This exposure to new words in context helps students understand their meaning naturally, without memorising lists. L: A rich vocabulary, in turn, improves performance in all subjects, not just English.


Part 3 — Conclusion

The conclusion does NOT introduce new ideas. It:

  1. Restates the thesis in different words
  2. Summarises the main points briefly
  3. Ends with a final thought — a call to action, prediction, or reflection

Example conclusion: "In summary, reading shapes thinking, builds language, and opens minds to new worlds. The evidence is clear: students who read regularly outperform those who do not. Schools and parents must work together to make reading a celebrated habit — not a chore."


Types of Essays

TypePurposeKey features
DescriptiveDescribe a person, place, or event in detailSensory language, adjectives, imagery
NarrativeTell a story with a beginning, middle, and endCharacters, setting, plot, first person often used
ArgumentativeConvince the reader of your positionClear thesis, evidence, counterargument, rebuttal
ExpositoryExplain a topic clearly and factuallyFacts, definitions, logical structure, third person

Tip for choosing tone: Descriptive and narrative essays use vivid, personal language. Argumentative and expository essays use formal, objective language.


Linking Words (Transition Words)

FunctionLinking Words
Adding a pointFurthermore, Moreover, In addition, Also
ContrastingHowever, On the other hand, Nevertheless, Despite this
Giving an exampleFor example, For instance, To illustrate
Showing cause/effectTherefore, As a result, Consequently, Hence
ConcludingIn conclusion, To summarise, Overall, Ultimately
SequencingFirst, Secondly, Next, Then, Finally

Worked sentence using a linker: "Reading improves focus. Furthermore, it reduces stress by allowing the mind to relax."


Common Essay Mistakes to Avoid

MistakeBetter approach
Starting every sentence with "I"Vary sentence structure; use impersonal constructions
No topic sentence in paragraphsBegin every body paragraph with a clear point
Listing facts without explanationAlways explain HOW the fact supports your point
Repeating the same wordUse synonyms and vary vocabulary
Too short conclusionGive a meaningful final thought, not just "In conclusion, this is my essay."

Quick check

  1. What are the three parts of a well-structured essay?
  2. What does the "E" in PEEL stand for, and why is it necessary twice?
  3. Write one linking word for each function: adding a point, contrasting, and concluding.
  4. What type of essay would you write if asked to explain how photosynthesis works?
  5. Improve this conclusion: "So, reading is good. Students should read more. That is all."

Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Essay Writing.

3 topics • Notes • Practice • AI explanations available

For generative engines & students

Every topic page delivers structured HTML (headings, lists, tables, takeaways) in the first response. Perfect for citations in AI overviews and fast scanning by students and parents.