Monday, 7 April 2014

Academic Writing Services - Beware the Paper Mill

The paper mill is the global industry based on the sale of academic essays to students. There are a number of ways that additional papers are added to the paper mill; here are three of them.
Essay Databases: Donate a paper to join.
There are a number of websites that hold databases of tens of thousands of papers all browseable and searchable once you have registered. These sites are sometimes even free! Wow. But hold on they are not exactly free, first you have to contribute an essay yourself by uploading it to the database. Now you may ask "What's wrong with that?"; maybe it's an old essay that has already been marked. Well to a point you are right but remember these websites are commercial businesses and some are very profitable. The profit is earned as a result of having all these papers in their database.
The free anti plagiarism scanner
There is a business currently offering free use of an anti plagiarism scanner to check your academic documents. Again this seems great; something for nothing. The process once again is an exchange, you add your essay to our database and we'll let you check it for plagiarism. The first problem with this is that the scanner they offer uses an entirely different method of assessing the percentage plagiarism rate than Turnitin the programme used by universities. I recently submitted the same document to both scanners, the free one came up with 5% but when it was scanned by Turnitin the level rose above 25%.. oops!
But that's not all. When you register for the service you notice that you start getting emails from a company that sells essays! A few clicks later and it's clear that they are the same company. So the provider of the scanner harvesting thousands of papers from students and academics also sell essays...hmmm?
Free proofreading scam
Finally, there are the ads that appear on websites like Gumtree offering free proofreading. Some offer to proofread part of your document for free but insist you send the whole document - why? Some claim they are doing it in return for a reference - one I know has been stating this for at least two years - how many references do you need for heaven's sake.
Others will do it all and don't even need a reference- an offer that seems too good to be true. One I saw recently was written in appalling English and the advertisers' only claim to be qualified was that they were 'a former London resident'.... and presumably a current Lagos resident! When you submit your document you will be told that they are 'fully booked'. But by then it's too late they have already got your work.
This work will go on to be sold to others I'm afraid. So what to do? Well you should certainly value your work, others do and they see pound signs. Any large scale heavily promoted website is likely to be part of the paper mill with a large database of students' and academics' work. Once your essay is 'out there' what happens to it is beyond your control. So my advice on this is that 'small is beautiful'. Secondly, avoid 'free proofreading' offers. Proofreading is a painstaking lengthy task if done properly and frankly nobody would do it for free.

How To Write Custom Essays

Are you worried about writing essays because of the errors that creep due to lack of proper understanding of the subject or because English is not your primary language? Are you afraid that the quality of your essays is not par with others and disquieted about your grades? Do you ever feel that there is no one to help you in writing essays or test papers on behalf of you? If your answer is yes for any of them, then you are definitely in need of custom writers who will not only help you in securing good grades but also help you in improving your standards with their tutorials and coaching material.
The following are some of the tips that will help you in writing essays
  • Give a breath taking introduction - The first paragraph will be used asses your quality and content of the rest of the essay, so write something interesting in the introduction of your paragraph.
  • Write complete details about the topic in Body - This is core of the essay. Here you can put forth all your ideas, you can elaborate what you want to convey to the readers, debate on the issues, give different dimensions to the problem, weigh various alternatives against each other's pros and cons.
  • Give thought provoking solutions - Everyone wants solutions to the problems. They would accept and like to have meaningful, practical and useful solutions. So, at the end of your essay write something that will make the readers to think and do.
  • Previously published papers - Read and understand the previously published papers. Some individuals start writing without doing ground work and end up in submitting content similar to others. This will damage your reputation
  • Specific Niche - It is not better be master of one niche than being jack of all niches. You will be able to focus and write better articles
The above are the basic steps that need to be followed if you want to write a good essay. Not necessarily all can write essays in such an orderly fashion. Everyone can't write attention-grabbing essays. It is an art of jotting down the complex idea of the topic, presenting live examples at suitable situations and concluding with what is better to all people. So, don't regret yourself when you are not able to chip in! Take help of the experts, see their style of writing essays and learn the art of writing. Next time, you can try to write an essay of your own.

College Admissions Essays that Take 1st Place -A Personal Statement Checklist

Congratulations on your move toward a college degree. And congratulations on seeking support for writing your admissions essay/personal statement. The squeaky motor gets the oil, so you will be slick and running sleekly in a just a few days...in plenty of time to submit and relax before transferring from a community college or crossing over from high school to higher learning.
While the application and entry process is exciting, it is also rigorously demanding... when it comes to writing the prompted essays. But instead of getting intimidated, remember, it is a process with a series of many laps around the track. Do the steps one at a time, on time, and even ahead of time; be just as rigorous as the entry requirements are; and use the following as a checklist throughout the entire personal statement writing process, and you will create a worthy piece of writing that will smoothly slide you right into the institution of your choice.
1. Use that fine machine (your head): get ahead, start ahead.
___Start early. If the application and essay are due in three months, start working on it in two.
2. Start small.
___If the task seems overwhelming, choose an easy, quick, or interesting part of the task. Then you will have a momentum that will push you forward into the larger, more time consuming tasks. For example, you know your name, address, and (maybe) what you want to major in. Fill out the application.
3. Read X3 before you start to build.
___The first time, read the directions and the prompt choices for the personal statement(s) you have to write as if you are reading a magazine for fun.
___The second time, read the prompt choices as if you are reading a catalog and shopping for the one (best) item (prompt). Choose the one topic that you feel you have the most to write on, the one you like, the one you are drawn to.
___The third time, read with a highlighter or pen: highlight or underline the key words in the prompt's introductory sentences and the key action words (those words that tell you to do something). For example, if the prompt reads as follows, you would mark it like this [I use brackets here for highlighting]:
...Is there [anything] you would like us to know [about you or your academic record] that you have not had the opportunity to [describe] elsewhere in this application? What is [your intended major]? [Discuss] [how your interest in the field developed] and [describe] any [experience you have had in the field] - such as volunteer work, internships and employment - and what you have gained from your involvement....
4. Make notes...and make them visible.
___You now have the (five, here) parts to list on a big piece of paper or cardboard that you then prop up or tape up on your wall or pc. (I always do this--tape the required points on my computer; then I can constantly refer to it as I am writing. It keeps me on track--on topic.)
5. Consider your audience.
___As with any writing, you decide your tone based on who will be reading the work. In this case, you are submitting to a committee of readers who read stacks and stacks of these things. So...
6. Be real. Be honest. Be engaging. Be positive. Be fresh.
I know, I know. I hate it too when someone tells me to be myself. (Who else would I be?) The point is to avoid pretense, avoid b.s. (lies), and avoid whining, begging, and angry, bitter, resentful tirades.
The readers want to know who you are, how you would fit, and what you would bring to the university.
___Brainstorm a list of true details, writing them on the left side of a piece of paper. On the right side, note next to each item how that makes you a perfect candidate for the place. (The left side is negative, too. The right side is the balance, turning the negatives into positives.)
7. Engage.
Granted, when we writers begin drafting, we may not necessarily begin with the opening paragraph. We scribble the lines we remember, the body, the conclusion, topic sentences, important buzz words, or anything else that comes to mind. But when you do get to the opener, it must be as outstanding, alluring, inviting, and original as possible.
I promise I know what I'm talking about here. As a/an (former) Associate Professor of college English, I assisted hundreds of students with both graduate and undergraduate application packets and processes--teaching workshops on the entrance essays, tutoring students in the complete process in the colleges' learning centers, even receiving students in my home (where they still continue to approach me for consultation and support).
So I have seen/see many students get accepted to Berkeley, Cornell, Stanford, State, and other private and public institutions--based on their essays, which I helped them to write and (ugh) rewrite using the standards and guidelines of the major institutions of higher learning (and this handy manual of caveats I have compiled over the years). And those essays start with unique, engaging intros--that follow these tricks:
___Get rid of all abstractions (now also considered clichés in the academic arena...since they have been driven into the ground by overuse). Avoid using the "success" "achieve" "lifelong dream" terms, words, and phrases. The panel knows you want/need these. They expect it is a given, and would probably have group heart attacks if someone wrote he/she was applying to be unsuccessful, to achieve nothing, and to listlessly idle, having no dream whatsoever. (Okay, you get my point, right?)
___Erase the "I am an immigrant who needs to make my parents proud" clichés. (I promise you, this strategy is empty and useless. I have received students needing entry essay help who are immigrants, children of immigrants, products of immigrant DNA, victims of immigrant mentality....every first draft I read started with this kind of intro. And I've only helped about 500 students with this exact same opener. Imagine the weary tsk-ing and head shaking of the board member who reads thousands!)
The bottom line is this: asking to be admitted because you experienced--and are slamming the board with--a number of boo-hoo poor me hardships is the same as going to a job interview and answering questions about what skills you bring to the job by crying that you need to feed your kids. How does your need qualify you? It doesn't.
___And/or, forget the "I was neglected, abused, poor, hungry, ugly, fat..." opener. Same lecture as above applies here, too. Unless...
___You can turn the negative into a positive. If you have to be real, and the victim thing is part of your story, show how that pain/struggle/torture contributed to who you are today and to what you bring to the school. But do it later in the essay and do it in passing, in mention, in brief...and then move on. So, how do you open a personal statement?
___ By opening the essays with a metaphor, a narrative, or appropriate facts and statistics that will make the essay(s) stand out, appeal to the board, and give those readers something interesting...you have a better chance of them saying to each other, "Hey, did you read that Joe Blow essay?" and of them putting it in the "YES" pile.
Consider this: what running theme(s) would best represent you? For example, would you, like Helen Zhang did, use a water metaphor to represent your immigrating from a country where you were going with the flow of running your own company, then moved to a country where you started over, re-built the ship from scratch, beat the hell out of those choppy stormy seas, and are now sailing, headed for helping others to row to safe shores?
Or would you, like Celestino Garcia, use a food/feeding metaphor to show how getting your fingers broken by a cruel (and insane) uncle who then forced you to do farm work and refused to feed you has instead driven you to culinary school, to prepare lovely meals for feeding today's children even worse off than he was without food?
Or do you prefer to open with a description, as Sarah Choi did, for example, of living in the projects, looking through a cracked window at the police lights every night you sat to do grade school homework--till one day you made it out, still keeping in mind (and writing it back in at the end of your essay) the sirens and lights and project life from whence you came, so you can, when you graduate, return to the projects and aid others in escaping the flashing lights and flashes of gunfire?
8. You've got their attention. Now make your point. Boldly.
___Here's where your thesis comes in. Once you have used an original description, metaphor, statistic, fact, or definition to open, wrap up the intro with a declarative, confident statement. For example,
"This is why I want to attend Oxford." will not help you make your way into Oxford. Again, it's obvious you want to attend/be accepted, and that's not reason enough to be accepted.
But "With this experience, with excellent grades, with a steady volunteer record, and with a pro-active attitude, I will make dynamic, positive, and supportive contributions to the community at Oxford, and later, to the community at large." will give you the horsepower you need to finish the essay and to get accepted.
9. You've done the hard part. Follow through to the finish.
___The body of your essay will now have the theme/line of reasoning it needs to follow. If it helps, print the thesis in large lettering, and tape this up, too. It is the main point you will now prove with examples of
__your g.p.a.
__your outstanding performance awards
__your volunteer experience (where, when, etc.)
__your tutoring, interning, or work-related experience
__your influences/reasons for getting into the field
__any points the prompt asks for
10. Accelerate using anything you have/know/have done.
The support (body of the essay) is most important nowadays, to give you the boost you need to compete. For instance, a number of schools/majors are impacted. Computers and business, for example, have students neck-and-neck in fierce competition for a seat in the department.
So when there are 500 applicants with the same 4.0 g.p.a, the same awards, and the same backgrounds and work experience, you need to use facts (no b.s., made-up stuff) that will give you the extra speed. This is why tutoring tales help. This is where volunteering cranks up the volume. This is where you use what you can to race ahead. As long as it's truth-based. If they ask for two letters of recommendation, send three. If they ask for one way you will contribute to the university, give them two: you will help in the department, assisting the professors (for free); and you will tutor those struggling in a (related) subject you are fortunate to do well in.
10. But how do you come in 1st and keep the rules of the road?
Here's where revising, revising, and revising again comes in. First, write all you can, all you want, all you know. Then, go back and check those instructions. How many pages must you use? What size font?
___Usually, you have a page limit that you must not go over.
___At the same time, you must cover 3-4 areas in your essay.
___Follow the instructions--to...the...letter. (This will also give you an advantage, for the instructions are there not just to get to know you but to test whether you are adept at following instructions.)
___Don't give the readers any excuse/reason to eliminate you.
___Tighten your text. This is covered in the Mechanics section below.
11. Keep that machine well-oiled: use your pit mechanics.
___Revise the opener. Make sure it is fresh, engaging, relevant.
___Revise the thesis. Be sure it's complete and expresses the general point.
___Revise the body (supporting evidence). Check that it addresses part of the prompt. (This is another "test"--does the applicant cover all parts of the question?)
___Rev. the paragraphs and transitions between paragraphs. Be sure each is coherent, and that all are organized and connected, and therefore easy to follow.
___Rev. the sentences. Use variety. Combine sentences for rhythm and flow.
___Rev. the diction. Get rid of useless words, extra words, abstract words. This is where you will be able to shorten the essay.
___Revise the spelling. Do not rely on the pc spellchecker! It is two e-z to Miss homonyms and readers will not be able to bare it!
___Revise the punctuation. Get a tutor for this if you need to.
___Use human mechanics, too. We have brains that are set up so perfectly that they do this thing called hypercorrection. So when we read our own drafts, our brains insist on automatically correcting and reading as correct text that has errors in it. How do you fix this? Have someone else read the work aloud. You listen carefully. When the reader stumbles, pauses, or does a "Wha...?" double-take, you stop the reader, catch the error, and change it, right then and there, in the pit stop. Before you mail it--again--re-read and revise. Re-read and revise.
___12. Mail the entry--the application (with nothing left blank), the check (not blank), and the essay (cleaned and polished)--before the deadline...
in plenty of time for the university readers to read it, laugh over it, cry over it (which does happen--I have cried over the top essays that got Sarah, Tino, Helen, and many others into law school, computer tech school, business school, and more), and except you...I mean, accept you.
Now get your motor running and win that race.
N.H.-born prize-winning poet, creative nonfiction writer, memoirist, and award-winning Assoc. Prof. of English, Roxanne is also web content and freelance writer/founder of [http://www.roxannewrites.com], a support site for academic, memoir, mental disability, and creative writers who need a nudge, a nod, or just ideas…of which Roxanne has 1,000s, so do stop in for a visit, as this sentence can’t possibly get any longer…….

Writing a Good Custom Essay

A good essay makes a lasting impression on the reader about your thoughts. It is imperative that the ideas chosen are clear to the writer's thoughts. A custom essay is meant to convey a topic in details and has to be written a stern attention to fact. Now we look at the basics of essays in general.
The introduction of an essay is where the writer ushers in the central idea behind the essay. It may very well contain some facts and a basic idea of the remaining part of the essay. For a custom essay meant for evaluation make sure that the topic is researched first. Do not hesitate to write and re-write the essay once you have researched the topic of the custom essay well enough.
Make your body descriptive and clear. Use multiple paragraphs if necessary. A custom essay has details embedded into the topic and those details have to be discussed separately. The use of details can be strengthened by using valid examples. Do not hesitate to quote experts on the topic and make sure that appropriate references are included. Attach a bibliography at the end of the essay if you have to. Make sure that you address the topic diligently.
The conclusion shows the significance of the point that is made in the essay. This is a checkpoint for the reader. A brief on what was discussed in the essay and what conclusion was reached, in other words you have to summarize the essay and your viewpoint. A very good way of ending a custom essay is with future references or the adept reference to a larger issue at hand. It will make the reader think on the topic.
There are three types of custom essay, the expository writing, narrative writing, and the provocative writing type.
  • The expository type essay that explains a certain topic to the reader. It follows the most basic essay structure; the introduction, the body and the conclusion. The only distinctive feature of this type of custom essay is the body of the essay which contains arguments of reason.
  • The narrative custom essay type has more of the writer's experiences; it doesn't always imply that it has to be in first person narrative.
  • Provocative essays come in handy when describing products and services. The body of the essay contains facts and experiences related to current issues. In this type of essay plagiarism must be avoided.
The process of editing your own work becomes difficult sometimes. Read it out loud so that the small fallacies of punctuation and spelling errors come to your notice. Using a word processing tool on a computer also helps in polishing the custom essay. The bibliography if any comes at the end of an essay. You can also make note of any references used.
A regular freelance writer and poet. I have a personal storehouse of over 500 poems, more than a dozen short stories. I have written in newspapers, magazines and journals for a net of over 10 years. I started with writing early in school and have never looked back since.
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Completing the Graduate School Essay

When you are working on your application for graduate school, you will inevitably reach this area: the Graduate School Personal Essay. This summary is an influential and powerful statement that may hold more influence than test scores or previous education.
A concise and eloquent statement tells the admissions staff many things about you. This is your opportunity to highlight all your positive qualities. Are you attempting to further your career to help others? To open opportunities for communities or other areas that are currently in need? Are you determined? Ambitious? Would your drive match the demands of graduate school?
When you have developed your strongest points, briefly elaborate on them using real-life examples. Be certain to include any information on experience as it relates to this goal. The essay can also be used to explain difficulties found in your transcripts.
You should approach this essay in drafts. Pre-write and brain storm on creative ways to set yourself apart through the essay. There are several standard areas you should discuss in your paper. Why does the school fit you? What does their program offer that no other programs do? Where do you want your career to go? What is your previous experience in the field? Do you have any research or dedicated experience?
What is your history of career related experience? Have you taken coursework already related to the field? What was it?
Ideally, you want a well-written and clear essay. You want to prove your aptitude and ability to communicate with the faculty and your peers. Don't fill up the pages with half-negatives (i.e. might, possibly, would like to, have thought of, etc). Be determined and deliberate on your goals. This does not set your future in stone so you shouldn't tell the faculty you may want to do this today, and possibly change to that tomorrow. Indecision does not appear professional on paper.
The accepted essay lengths vary by institution, but you should expect a length between one and two pages. This will give you ample room to make your statement and elaborate, without going overboard. A length restriction ensures that your work will be concise and poignant without being wordy and long-winded.
One good element to really elaborate is how you first gained an interest in the field you are pursuing. Your essay will be autobiographical and you should expect to promote yourself. Give an insight into what inspires you and what you believe are the rewards of your efforts.
When you complete your essay, you will need to edit and polish. You may consult with any standard grammar guide for assistance. Watch your punctuation and usage throughout the essay. Can you shorten a phrase? Would the sentence appear with more action instead of adverbs? Are your modifiers limited or are they scattered through your work? There are also reference books devoted solely to the process of writing the Graduate School Essay. They can provide much greater aide and offer insight you may not find online.
Your graduate school essay will be a challenge to write. You will have a predetermined length, your essay will require focus, and your material must show both your ability as well as your determination. If you utilize the advice of others, study relevant articles and books, and learn when you should give yourself a break, the chore of authoring this essay doesn't have to be grueling. Pace yourself and your graduate essay will far simpler than you expect.

10 Ways to Implement a Successful Company-Wide Business Writing Training Program

Many companies over the past few years have introduced business writing training programs to improve the quality of the letters, reports and emails of their staff. Some programs have been enormously successful; others have fizzled
The reason: employees will change only if senior management is thoroughly sold on the need for change and announces that all employees are expected to co-operate. One of the most successful business writing training programs I was involved with had the president's full backing; he demonstrated this by announcing that writing ability was to be considered in every job appraisal. And he wanted his employees to equally proficient in emails and report writing.
A second problem involves learning strategies. Learning a new activity and turning it into a habit takes only a couple of weeks. However, research shows it usually takes about six weeks to unlearn a long-term behaviour and to firmly entrench a change. This is particularly true for writing as we have all been doing some form of writing since early grade school. Changing academic writing into a style befitting letters, reports and emails takes time and energy.
Unfortunately, too many training programs do not offer a follow-up method to keep the changes fully in the forefront of the employee's mind for the necessary period of time.
If you are planning to initiate a writing program for your company, here are proven ways to ensure your success.
  1. Work with an experienced trainer in business writing to design a workshop specifically tailored for your staff. Determine your focus: writing, letters, emails, reports, proposals, etc. Involve your managers in the objectives of the workshop.
  2. Have managers attend a shortened version of the workshop so they understand what their staff will be taught or - better yet - have them attend the workshop with their staff.
  3. Have each workshop introduced by a high-ranking executive to give it proper weight. The introduction should stress the purpose and importance of the program.
  4. Deliver the workshop to groups of 15 to 20 people, preferably from the same department. A two-day workshop with built-in practice sessions works well. (In my experience, you will get even better results if you spread the program over a month using ½ day sessions. However, the downside of this is monitoring attendance to ensure staff members attend all four sessions.)
  5. Present each participant with a comprehensive manual to be used during the workshop and then kept as a reference guide after the course.
  6. Insist that after the workshop, participants submit samples of their writing at regular intervals to ensure they are continuing to incorporate the new style. The samples should be submitted two weeks, six weeks and ten weeks after the workshop. The samples should be critiqued and returned directly to the writers with suggestions for any necessary improvement.
  7. Set up an internal hot-line number to assist participants with specific writing problems.
  8. Send staff - periodically - brief reminder bulletins or emails on writing points. Include articles on business writing in the company newsletter.
  9. Update all the company's forms. This is a key area and one that is often overlooked.
  10. Prepare a brief style manual for all employees describing how your organization wants its business documents laid out. Among other things, the manual should include recommended type sizes, fonts, and the company rules for capitalization and spelling. Every new employee should be given a copy.
Too often training doesn't take because of limited buy-in or follow up. However, following these proven steps guarantees your company's money and your staff's time are well spent. And you will notice a definite, long-term difference in the written communications of your people.

Writing a Custom Essay

Custom essay writing is a demanding exercise that calls for writers to be in appropriate mindsets in the pre-writing and writing processes of the exercise. Writers that seek to achieve the best of results in essay tasks must summon their perceptual, research and writing faculties in well balanced manner that will incontrovertibly demonstrate the maturity and the coming of age of their research, writing and critical capabilities. Custom writing demands that the writer be disciplined if he or she has to handle the multi-tasking approaches that characterize the feasible custom essay drafting and compiling strategies.
Before delving into the nitty-gritties of gathering and putting though formulated and gathered ideas on the essay topic, writers must be sure that they have clearly understood the topic and have sufficiently construed the denotations and connotations of the key terms used in the essay topic of thesis statement. This enables writers to locate essay subject into its appropriate conceptual and philosophical framework. Many writers especially inexperienced students usually falter in the writing of essays due to an abysmal lack of understanding of the defined requirements of the essay task outlined in the thesis statement. Critical terms to watch out for include the imperatives like 'analyse', 'critique', 'describe', 'discuss', 'explore', etc.
Writers must understand the different requirements of custom essay writing tasks implied by these thesis statement or essay topic imperatives. An essay that analyses is unmistakably different from the one that describes. The former requires a critical presentation of concurrent and divergent perspectives whilst the later requires the outlining and illustrating of the dynamics and dimensions of an issue or any object in focus without necessarily critiquing any aspects.
Failure to correctly interpret the essay task imperatives often results in undesirables like failure or failure to obtain one's set satisfactory goals and standards and the impact of failure may deteriorate into feelings of dissatisfaction and profound disdain of one's self.
When writers get to understand the actual requirements of the custom essay task, they are empowered to conduct relevant and adequate researches in order to gather all relevant and related facts and opinions that will enable them to present balanced and professionally articulated arguments and standpoints in the custom essay Writing also exerts significant demands on the exploit of a writer's polished and prolific writing acumen. The manipulation of language in inventive, incisive and non-overbearing parlance comes as the crux of the actual custom essay writing exercise. Writers who fail to pay adequate attention to the aspects of presentation run the risk of letting their research and knowledge substance waste away in the knitting of unprofessional and mediocre write ups. This again must be expected to precipitate failure.
Admittedly, custom essay writing requires the integration of key and core research, writing and writing traits succored on supportive personal skills that entail discipline and acute time management among other qualities.

Essay Editing Service

If asked whether they'd rather jump in the closest river or lake, or sit down and write an academic essay, most college aged students would grab their swim suit and ask you to point them in the right direction. A professional essay editing service can help you with writing academic papers, which can be a very intimidating process -- especially for college entrance essays or for publication, and not just typical college essays.
Many writers are less than confident in their ability to preset coherent ideas while avoiding typos and fact errors, and that's why they usually think about using an essay editing service before they submit. When deciding which essay editor to hire, take a look at their samples. There are many advantages to having professional editing services proofread your academic research paper or dissertation. The professors or teachers who will be reviewing these types of essays are looking for a certain tone and type of argument. Having a professional editor who has experience with academic essays can help you turn mediocre writing into a superb writing.
A professional essay editing service will, at the least read your writing thoroughly and fix any grammatical errors, misspellings, and incorrect word choices. Some essay proofreading services will go a step further and edit for organization, clarity, and structure. If you're thinking about sending every academic paper you write to an essay editing service before you turn it in, you might want to make sure your editor understands your needs. Most professors are able to develop a good idea of your tone and point of view throughout the course of the semester. A professional essay editing service will understand your academic essay writing and editing requirements.