If your essay requires research, then that should be the next step. If not, you can jump right to outlining or free writing... whichever works best for you. Some people are better at organizing up front, and some people need to get it all out on the page, and then move it around and fill in the blanks to get it in the right order.
An essay is a series of paragraphs about a specific topic. Once you have picked your topic, here are your next steps: * Research the topic. Write down all the facts you discover about your topic. Many times, when you learn one fact, it will make you ask more questions, and then you find out more facts. For now, just write down all the facts you learn. * Decide what you want to include in the essay. Make an outline of what you want to discuss, and see how many of your facts you can fit into this outline. Anything that doesn't fit, you can just file away for the next essay! * Outline your paragraphs. Each paragraph should have one topic sentence, and the other sentences should support or prove that one sentence. You should have a separate paragraph for each one of your facts, where you introduce the fact, then give the statistics or other data you found to support that fact. * Go over the essay to check for grammar, spelling, and punctuation, then rewrite it neatly and turn it in.
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Make an outline for different sub-ideas for the essay. For example, decide what the different paragraphs are going to be about and what ideas will be included in those paragraphs.
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Youhave to combine everything you reserched and type/write your essay
hope i helped!
I would write an outline of my essay, then start the introduction.
selecting a topic
outline
"Credible" is defined as "Being believable, based on information, source or fact." - Something that is credible, is reliable, it's trustworthy.
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its accuracy can be corroborated
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Information that is presented as scientific but has not been gathered through reliable scientific methods or Implausible or untestable scientific claims
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It is reliable
"Credible" is defined as "Being believable, based on information, source or fact." - Something that is credible, is reliable, it's trustworthy.
Same as reliable.
Yes,fairly reliable.
Look through your sources for information you can use
Look through your sources for information you can use.
its accuracy can be corroborated
The RPG Fanatic - 2010 Why Wikipedia Video Game Articles are Not Reliable Credible 2-5 was released on: USA: 7 February 2011
A credible source will have accurate and up-to-date information, be written by an expert or someone with expertise in the field, cite their sources, and be free from bias or personal opinions.
USA today is not considered to be the most reliable or credible news source, as it has faced scandals in the past (around 2004) regarding where its sources come from.
When a source for evidence is not convincing or reliable, it should be considered unreliable or questionable. It is important to verify information from credible sources to ensure accuracy and authenticity.