Order Number |
636738393092 |
Type of Project |
ESSAY |
Writer Level |
PHD VERIFIED |
Format |
APA |
Academic Sources |
10 |
Page Count |
3-12 PAGES |
Synthesis Essay Instructions
Prompt: In 700-1,100 words, convince a hiring manager in your field that your choice of areas of study has prepared you well for your proposed future career.
Requirements:
You may use first person, but not second person.
Your grammar, spelling, and punctuation should be flawless. Visit the Liberty University writing centers if you want extra help: https://www.liberty.edu/academics/casas/academicsuccess/index.cfm?PID=38382
As per college writing best practice, your essay should be thesis driven, and each body paragraph should ideally be centered around a specific area of study. Include introduction and conclusion paragraphs.
Develop your main points using specific examples of particular classes, information, and skills you learned that will contribute to your career field.
If you are not pursuing a professional job after you graduate (retiring, stay-at-home-parent, graduate school, etc.), explain how what you have learned will be relevant to your next stage in life.
Use APA formatting and a title page, but no abstract page is required.
Additional Suggestions:
You need to justify all areas of study in your degree, but you can use as many paragraphs or sub-points as you like for each.
Remember you will succeed if you convince your audience that your areas of study were good choices, not necessarily that they should hire you. Focus on how well prepared you are based on your choices in undergrad.
Reliable sources, while not required, will make your argument far more trustworthy.
To begin brainstorming, you can ask yourself, “What relevant skills, knowledge, or experiences did I acquire in earning the credits for each of my areas of study?”
Note that even if you transferred in credit or received PLA credit for life experiences, you can still use skills learned through those to justify your decisions.
For many INDS students, their areas of study are a series of choices over the course of several years as they learn of new areas of interest and their career plans evolve; be honest but remember that it is up to you to explain why your skills are relevant to your field.
You should not explain your personal history or the story of how you chose your areas of study. Focus on how your areas of study connect to your future in this field.
If you have an area of study that seems to no longer apply to your proposed field, you still have to justify it. Be creative and remember back to what you learned; think about how it might still be relevant.
You can use Liberty’s web pages as a source when describing classes or your degree.