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  1. The Narrative Voice: It is acceptable for your essay to use either the 1st PERSON (‘I’) or the 3RD PERSON (‘one’, ‘it’ or ‘this essay...’). However, if you use the 1st person, be particularly careful you don’t slip into casual, familiar or ‘opinionated’ language. Never ‘chat’ to your audience! e.g. identify or address them as ‘you’.

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    • Make an Outline. So you have to write a sociological essay, which means that you already either received or have a topic in mind. The first thing for you to do is PLAN how you will attempt to write this essay.
    • Start Reading. Once you have prepared an outline for your essay, the next step is to start your RESEARCH. You cannot write a sociological essay out of thin air.
    • Make Notes. This is a step that a lot of people miss when they are preparing to write their essays. It is important to read, but how you read is also a very vital part.
    • Writing a Title, Subtitle, Abstract, and Keywords. Title. The title of any document is the first thing that a reader comes across. Therefore, the title should be provocative, specific, and the most well-thought part of any essay.
  2. First up, welcome to the wonderful world of sociology at Cambridge! This guidebook is (hopefully!) a treasure-trove of tips, help and support on doing sociology at Cambridge, written by current final year students. It’s a chance to offer some informal advice on the

  3. Whatever you write, give these guidelines your first and repeated attentions. Say what you mean the first time. “If I'm right, which is no certain matter, then social scientific reports are, on the one hand,

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  4. founders of sociologyKarl Marx, Max Weber, Émile Durkheim, George Herbert Mead, Jane Addams, and W. E. B. Du Bois—carried out the two core commitments of sociology.

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  5. Your essay’s purpose refers to its main rhetorical function with regard to why it is being written in the first place. Are you seeking to describe, narrate, argue or explain, these being the four common purposes for writing academic essays. Below is a brief description of each purpose, or ‘mode’, illustrated with examples. ESSAY MODES

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  7. An essay is not just about showing what you know. A good essay, whether for an exam or during term-time, is one that applies what you have learned to the task of addressing the specific essay question. With this in mind, the general advice is: Answer the question; keep it relevant.

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