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  1. ISEE Middle Level Essay
  2. Write a multi-paragraph response to a prompt.

ISEE MIDDLE LEVEL • ESSAY

Write a multi-paragraph response to a prompt.

Learn to organize your ideas into a clear, compelling essay that impresses admissions readers.

SECTION 1

Why Does Essay Writing Matter?

Writing has been a way for people to share their thoughts, ideas, and stories for thousands of years. The multi-paragraph essay (a piece of writing with several connected paragraphs) is one of the most important skills you will use in school and beyond. On the ISEE, your essay shows admissions officers who you really are.

The ISEE essay section gives you 30 minutes to respond to a personal prompt. The prompt usually asks you to reflect on your experiences, interests, or values. Your essay is not scored by the testing company, but it is sent directly to the schools you are applying to. That means the people making admissions decisions will read your actual words.

Minutes 1–3
Read and Plan
Read the prompt carefully. Brainstorm ideas and create a quick outline on scratch paper.
Minutes 3–5
Organize Your Outline
Choose your best 2–3 examples. Decide the order of your body paragraphs.
Minutes 5–23
Write Your Essay
Draft your introduction, body paragraphs, and conclusion. Focus on clear ideas and specific details.
Minutes 23–30
Revise and Proofread
Reread your essay. Fix spelling, grammar, and unclear sentences. Add transitions if needed.

The big question this lesson answers is: How do you turn a simple prompt into a well-organized, multi-paragraph essay in just 30 minutes? Let's break it down step by step.

SECTION 2

Core Principles of a Strong Essay

A great ISEE essay is built on a few simple principles. Think of these as the building blocks of your response. Every strong essay—whether it is written by a 7th grader or a professional author—follows these same ideas.

1

Clear Structure

Your essay needs an introduction, 2–3 body paragraphs, and a conclusion. Each paragraph has one main job.
2

Specific Examples

Don't just say "I learned a lot." Show the reader a moment when you learned something. Use details like names, places, feelings, and actions.
3

Authentic Voice

Write like yourself—not a robot. Admissions readers want to hear your personality. Be honest and genuine in your response.
4

Smooth Transitions

Transitions (connecting words and phrases) help your paragraphs flow together. Words like "however," "for example," and "in addition" guide the reader.
5

Clean Proofreading

Spelling mistakes and messy sentences distract readers from your great ideas. Always save 2–5 minutes to reread and fix errors.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of your essay like building a sandwich. The introduction is the top slice of bread—it tells the reader what's coming. The body paragraphs are the fillings—the good stuff with real details. The conclusion is the bottom slice—it holds everything together. Without all three parts, your sandwich (and your essay!) falls apart.
SECTION 3

The Essay Structure at a Glance

Let's look at the structure of a multi-paragraph essay visually. This diagram shows you exactly what each part of your essay should do and roughly how long each section should be.

ESSAY STRUCTURE MAPINTRODUCTION (3–4 sentences)• Hook the reader with an interesting opening• State your thesis (main idea / answer to the prompt)BODY PARAGRAPH 1 (4–6 sentences)• Topic sentence introducing your first example• Specific details: who, what, where, when, how you felt• Explain why this example supports your main ideaBODY PARAGRAPH 2 (4–6 sentences)• Transition + topic sentence for your second example• More vivid details and personal reflection• Connect this example back to your thesisCONCLUSION (2–3 sentences)• Restate your main idea in a fresh way• End with a memorable thought or reflection
This diagram shows the four main sections of an ISEE essay. Notice how the body paragraphs are the longest—that's where your best details go.

As you can see, each section of the essay has a clear job. The introduction grabs attention and states your main idea. The body paragraphs provide specific stories and examples. The conclusion wraps everything up. When each part does its job, the essay feels organized and easy to follow.

SECTION 4

How Each Paragraph Works

The Introduction: Your First Impression

Your introduction has two big jobs. First, it needs a hook (an interesting opening sentence that makes the reader want to keep going). A hook could be a question, a surprising fact, or a brief moment from your life. Second, it needs a thesis statement (one clear sentence that answers the prompt and tells the reader your main idea).

💡 Hook Examples
Weak hook: "I am going to write about my favorite hobby." Strong hook: "The first time I picked up a paintbrush, I accidentally splattered blue paint across my mom's white tablecloth—and somehow created something beautiful." The strong hook drops the reader right into a moment. It makes them curious!

Body Paragraphs: Show, Don't Tell

This is the most important rule for your body paragraphs: show, don't tell. Instead of writing "I was nervous," show the reader what being nervous looked like. Did your hands shake? Did you forget your words? Did your stomach feel like it was doing backflips? Specific details make your writing come alive.

Each body paragraph should start with a topic sentence (a sentence that introduces the main point of that paragraph). Then you add details, examples, and your own thoughts. Finally, you end by connecting the paragraph back to your thesis.

The Conclusion: Leave a Lasting Impression

Your conclusion should not just repeat your introduction word for word. Instead, restate your main idea in a fresh way. You might reflect on what you learned, how you grew, or why the topic still matters to you. Think of the conclusion as the last impression you leave on the admissions reader—make it count!

Transitions: The Glue Between Paragraphs

Without transitions, your essay can feel like a bunch of separate paragraphs stacked on top of each other. Transition words and phrases connect your ideas smoothly. Use words like "In addition," "However," "For example," "As a result," and "Looking back" at the start of new paragraphs.

SECTION 5

Showing vs. Telling: The Secret to Great Writing

One of the biggest differences between an okay essay and a great one is how well you show your experiences instead of just telling about them. Let's compare the two approaches side by side.

TELLING vs. SHOWING✗ TELLING (Weak)"I was really nervous beforemy piano recital. I practiceda lot. When it was over, I washappy. It was a good experienceand I learned a lot from it."Problems:→ Vague: "practiced a lot" — how?→ No sensory details→ No specific moment described→ "Learned a lot" — learned what?→ Boring to read✓ SHOWING (Strong)"As I walked to the piano bench,my fingers trembled and my sheetmusic blurred. I took a deep breath,placed my hands on the cool keys,and began to play. By the secondmeasure, the shaking stopped. Themelody I had practiced every nightfor three months poured out likeit had been waiting to escape."Strengths:→ "Fingers trembled" — sensory detail→ "Cool keys" — uses touch→ "Three months" — specific→ Reader can picture the moment→ Engaging and memorable
Notice how the "showing" example puts you right there in the moment. You can almost feel the cool piano keys! That is the kind of writing that stands out to admissions readers.
Transforming "telling" sentences into "showing" sentences
Telling (Avoid)Showing (Use This!)
"I was scared.""My heart pounded so loud I was sure everyone could hear it."
"She was nice.""She smiled, pulled out an extra chair, and said, 'Come sit with us.'"
"It was fun.""We laughed so hard that lemonade came out of my nose."
"I worked hard.""Every morning before school, I ran two miles in the freezing cold."
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
"Showing" is like watching a movie scene—you see, hear, and feel what's happening. "Telling" is like reading a boring summary of that movie. Make the admissions reader watch your movie!
SECTION 6

Worked Example: From Prompt to Essay

📝 Sample ISEE Prompt
"Describe a time when you tried something new. What did you learn from the experience?"

Building a Response Step by Step

Step 1 — Read and Brainstorm (2 minutes)

Read the prompt twice. Ask yourself: "What new thing did I try? What happened? What did I learn?" Jot down 3–4 ideas on scratch paper: joined the debate team, tried cooking dinner, learned to skateboard, volunteered at the animal shelter.
Best idea chosen: Joined the debate team in 6th grade

Step 2 — Create a Quick Outline (2 minutes)

Write a bare-bones outline: Intro — I was terrified of public speaking; thesis: debate taught me courage. Body 1 — My first practice round disaster. Body 2 — How I improved and won my first round. Conclusion — I still get nervous, but I know I can push through.
Outline: 4 paragraphs with clear focus for each

Step 3 — Write the Introduction (3 minutes)

Start with a hook and end with your thesis: "I stared at the list of debate team sign-ups and almost walked away. Public speaking was my biggest fear—just raising my hand in class made my face turn red. But something inside me said, 'Try it,' and that small decision taught me that courage is not about being fearless; it's about being afraid and doing it anyway."
Hook: "I stared at the list...almost walked away." Thesis: "Courage is not about being fearless."

Step 4 — Write Body Paragraphs (10 minutes)

Body 1: "My first practice debate was a disaster. When I stood up to make my opening argument, the words on my notecards turned into a jumbled mess. My voice cracked, and I could feel every pair of eyes in the room drilling into me. I sat down after only thirty seconds, convinced I had made the worst mistake of my life. However, my coach, Mr. Rivera, pulled me aside and said something I'll never forget: 'Everyone stumbles at the start. The ones who get great are the ones who come back tomorrow.'" Body 2: "In addition, Mr. Rivera's words stuck with me. I started practicing in front of my mirror every night, timing myself and working on keeping my voice steady. Slowly, the shaking stopped. Two months later, at our first real tournament, I delivered my argument without a single stumble. When the judge announced that our team had won the round, I felt a wave of pride I had never experienced before."
Both body paragraphs use specific details and show rather than tell.

Step 5 — Write the Conclusion (2 minutes)

"Looking back, joining the debate team was one of the scariest things I've ever done—and one of the best. I still feel butterflies before every round, but now I know that those butterflies mean I'm about to do something that matters. Trying something new taught me that growth lives on the other side of fear."
Restates thesis in a fresh way and ends with a memorable reflection.

Step 6 — Proofread (3 minutes)

Reread the whole essay. Check for spelling errors, missing words, and run-on sentences. Make sure every paragraph connects to the next with a transition. In this essay, we used "However" and "In addition" and "Looking back" to link ideas.
Final essay: clean, organized, personal, and specific.
SECTION 7

What Makes an Essay Strong (and What to Avoid)

Now that you've seen how to build an essay from scratch, let's compare the habits of strong writers with common mistakes. Knowing what to avoid is just as important as knowing what to do.

Strong habits vs. common mistakes on the ISEE essay
Strong Essay HabitsCommon Mistakes
Opens with a vivid hook that grabs attentionOpens with "I am going to write about..."
Uses specific names, places, and detailsStays vague: "I did stuff" or "It was fun"
Includes 2–3 focused body paragraphsWrites one giant paragraph with no breaks
Uses transitions between paragraphsJumps from idea to idea with no connection
Shows emotions through actions and detailsOnly tells: "I was happy" or "It was sad"
Proofreads for spelling and grammarTurns it in without rereading
Ends with a thoughtful reflectionEnds abruptly or just repeats the introduction
⚡ REMEMBER THIS
Admissions readers may read hundreds of essays. Yours needs to stand out. Think about it this way: if you were choosing a book to read, would you pick the one that says "This is a good story" or the one that starts with "The door slammed shut, and I was alone in the dark"? Be the second kind of writer.
SECTION 8

Taking Your Essay to the Next Level

Once you have the basics down—introduction, body, conclusion, and specific details—there are extra techniques that can make your essay even more impressive. These are the moves that separate good essays from truly memorable ones.

Advanced techniques to elevate your ISEE essay
TechniqueWhat It MeansExample
Circular EndingReturn to the image or idea from your hook in your conclusionIf you opened with staring at the sign-up sheet, close with looking at that same sheet and smiling
Sensory DetailsUse the five senses (sight, sound, smell, touch, taste)"The gym smelled like floor wax and popcorn" instead of "We were in the gym"
DialogueInclude a short quote from someone in your storyMy coach said, "The ones who get great are the ones who come back tomorrow."
ReflectionPause in your story to explain what you were thinking or feeling"In that moment, I realized that failure wasn't the end—it was the beginning."

You do not need to use all of these techniques in one essay. Even adding just one—like a circular ending or a line of dialogue—can make your writing feel polished and mature. As you practice more essays, try experimenting with one new technique each time until they feel natural.

🎯 ISEE Test-Day Tip
On test day, you will handwrite your essay (or type it for online testing). Keep your handwriting neat and your paragraphs clearly indented. If you make a mistake, draw a single line through it—don't scribble it out messily. A clean-looking essay makes a better impression.
SECTION 9

Practice Activities

Now it's your turn! Work through these activities to build your essay-writing muscles. Each one targets a different skill you'll need on test day.

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
Read the following ISEE prompt: "What is your favorite thing to do in your free time? Why is this important to you?" Create a quick outline with four parts: (1) your hook idea, (2) your thesis sentence, (3) two body paragraph topics with one specific detail for each, and (4) your conclusion idea.
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC CALCULATION
Read this weak paragraph and rewrite it using "showing" instead of "telling": "Last summer, I volunteered at an animal shelter. It was fun and I liked it a lot. I helped with the animals and learned some things. It was a good experience." Rewrite this paragraph with at least three specific sensory details. Aim for 4–6 sentences.
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Read this ISEE prompt: "Describe one important lesson you learned in the last year." Write a complete introduction paragraph (3–4 sentences) that includes: (a) a hook that drops the reader into a specific moment, (b) brief context for the situation, and (c) a clear thesis statement that answers the prompt.
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Using the prompt "Describe one important lesson you learned in the last year" from the previous question, write one complete body paragraph (4–6 sentences). Your paragraph must include: a topic sentence, at least two specific details that "show" instead of "tell," and a closing sentence that connects back to your thesis about the lesson you learned.
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Here is a conclusion paragraph from a student essay responding to the prompt "What is your favorite thing to do in your free time?": "In conclusion, my favorite thing to do in my free time is drawing. I like drawing because it is fun and relaxing. Drawing is important to me. That is why it is my favorite thing to do." Identify three specific problems with this conclusion. Then rewrite it to be stronger, using at least one advanced technique (circular ending, sensory detail, reflection, or dialogue).
SUMMARY

Putting It All Together

A strong ISEE essay follows a clear multi-paragraph structure: an introduction with a hook and thesis, two or three body paragraphs packed with specific details that show rather than tell, and a conclusion that restates your main idea in a fresh way. Use transitions to connect your paragraphs smoothly.

Remember your 30-minute plan: spend 2–5 minutes planning and outlining, 15–20 minutes writing, and 2–5 minutes proofreading. Write with your authentic voice, use sensory details to bring your stories to life, and try advanced techniques like circular endings and dialogue to stand out. You've got this!

Varsity Tutors • ISEE Middle Level • Write a multi-paragraph response to a prompt.