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Master the structured, reflective essay that admissions officers use to discover who you really are.
The ISEE essay is unlike any other section of the exam. It is not scored by the Educational Records Bureau, yet it is sent directly to every admissions office that receives your ISEE results. This means the essay is your single best opportunity to speak in your own voice to the people deciding whether to admit you. Admissions readers evaluate your writing ability, maturity of thought, and authenticity — qualities that numbers alone cannot capture.
The tradition of the admissions essay has evolved considerably over the past century. Understanding that history helps you appreciate what schools are really looking for when they read your thirty-minute essay.
The central question this lesson addresses is straightforward but important: How do you craft a compelling, well-organized, multi-paragraph essay in just thirty minutes? By the end of this lesson, you will have a repeatable framework for planning, writing, and revising any ISEE essay prompt you encounter.
Before you start writing, you need a clear understanding of the foundational principles that separate a memorable essay from a forgettable one. These principles apply regardless of the specific prompt. Think of them as the architectural blueprint you follow every time you sit down to write.
A strong ISEE essay follows a predictable but flexible structure. The diagram below shows how the five essential components fit together within a four- or five-paragraph framework. Notice that the introduction and conclusion are shorter than the body paragraphs, and that each body paragraph follows its own internal pattern of claim, evidence, and reflection.
Notice the dashed lines between each section. These represent transitions — the connective tissue that makes your essay flow. A good transition might echo a key word from the previous paragraph or use a linking phrase like "This experience taught me" or "Beyond the classroom, I also discovered." Without transitions, even well-written paragraphs feel like disconnected islands.
Thirty minutes sounds short, but it is more than enough time if you divide it strategically. The key is to resist the urge to start writing immediately. Spending a few minutes planning will actually make your writing faster and more coherent.
ISEE Upper Level prompts are reflective and values-oriented. They typically ask you to make a choice and explain your reasoning. Common patterns include: "Describe a time when…," "If you could change one thing about…," and "What quality do you value most in…?" Regardless of the wording, every prompt is really asking the same question: "Who are you, and how do you think?" Keep this in mind as you plan your answer.
Now that you know the overall structure and time plan, let's examine each paragraph type in detail. Understanding the specific purpose and internal mechanics of each paragraph will help you write with confidence, even under time pressure.
Your introduction has three jobs: hook the reader, provide brief context, and state your thesis. A hook can be a vivid detail, a surprising statement, or a thought-provoking question. The context bridges the hook to your thesis by narrowing the focus. The thesis itself is one clear sentence that answers the prompt directly. Aim for three to four sentences total — this is not the place for lengthy backstory.
Each body paragraph follows what experienced writers call the C-E-R pattern: Claim, Evidence, Reflection. The claim is your topic sentence, which introduces the paragraph's main idea and connects it to your thesis. The evidence is a specific story, example, or detail that proves your claim — the more concrete and sensory, the better. The reflection is where you explain what this evidence means, what you learned, or how it shaped your perspective. This is the most important part because it reveals your depth of thought.
| Component | Purpose | Example Starter Phrases |
|---|---|---|
| Claim | States the paragraph's main idea and links to thesis | "One experience that shaped my view was…" / "The most important reason is…" |
| Evidence | Provides a specific, concrete story or detail | "During my sophomore year, I…" / "For example, when I volunteered at…" |
| Reflection | Interprets the evidence; shows what you learned or how you grew | "This taught me that…" / "Looking back, I realize…" / "What surprised me was…" |
A weak conclusion simply repeats the thesis word for word. A strong conclusion does something more: it elevates the discussion by connecting your personal experience to a broader truth. Ask yourself: "So what? Why does this matter beyond my own life?" Two to three sentences are usually sufficient. End with a sentence that leaves the reader thinking — a forward-looking statement, a call to action, or a concise insight that lands with impact.
Let's walk through the entire essay process using a real-style ISEE prompt. You will see each step of the plan-write-revise framework in action.
The difference between a strong essay and a weak one often comes down to a few critical choices. The table below contrasts effective and ineffective strategies so you can internalize the patterns that admissions readers reward.
| Effective Essay | Weak Essay |
|---|---|
| Opens with a specific, vivid detail: "The smell of old books in Ms. Reyes's classroom…" | Opens with a vague generality: "Community service is important for many reasons." |
| States a clear thesis in the first paragraph that directly answers the prompt. | Wanders through the introduction without ever taking a clear position. |
| Uses personal stories with names, settings, and sensory details. | Relies on clichés and abstract statements: "I learned a lot and grew as a person." |
| Reflects on what the experience meant and connects it back to the thesis. | Lists experiences without analysis or reflection. |
| Uses varied sentence lengths and purposeful word choices. | Repeats the same sentence pattern and uses vague words like "good," "nice," "stuff." |
| Concludes with a broader insight that leaves the reader thinking. | Ends abruptly or simply restates the thesis word for word. |
Once you have the basic structure down, a few sophisticated techniques can push your essay from competent to compelling. These are the moves that signal to an admissions reader that you are a mature, thoughtful writer.
| Technique | What It Is | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Circular Structure | Return to an image or idea from the opening in your conclusion, giving it new meaning after the essay's journey. | Open with the smell of old books; close by saying you now want to fill a shelf for someone else. |
| Show, Don't Tell | Replace abstract claims with sensory descriptions and actions that let the reader draw their own conclusions. | Instead of 'I was nervous,' write 'My hands trembled as I opened the classroom door.' |
| Sentence Variety | Alternate short, punchy sentences with longer, complex ones to create rhythm and emphasis. | 'Sofia looked up from the page. For the first time, she was smiling.' |
| Purposeful Word Choice | Replace generic verbs and adjectives with precise, vivid ones that carry more meaning per word. | Instead of 'walked slowly,' write 'shuffled' or 'ambled.' Instead of 'very happy,' write 'elated.' |
| Concession and Pivot | Briefly acknowledge a counterpoint, then pivot back to your thesis. This shows nuanced thinking. | 'Some might argue that hands-on service like building houses has more immediate impact. While I admire that work, I believe education creates change that multiplies over time.' |
These techniques connect directly to skills you will use in high school English classes, college application essays, and any professional writing. The ISEE essay is not an isolated exercise — it is your first opportunity to practice the kind of reflective, persuasive writing that independent schools will expect throughout your academic career.
The following activities are designed to build your essay skills progressively. Start with the conceptual exercise and work your way up. For each activity, take it seriously — write as if an admissions reader will see your work.
The ISEE Upper Level essay gives you thirty minutes to show admissions readers who you are through writing. Success depends on a clear thesis that directly answers the prompt, specific evidence drawn from personal experience, and genuine reflection that reveals what your experiences mean to you. Follow the plan-write-revise framework (3–5 minutes planning, 18–22 minutes writing, 3–5 minutes revising) to manage your time effectively. Each body paragraph should follow the C-E-R pattern (Claim, Evidence, Reflection), and your conclusion should broaden to a larger insight rather than merely repeating the thesis.
Elevate your writing with advanced techniques: use a circular structure to create cohesion, show rather than tell to bring your stories to life, and employ purposeful word choice to make every sentence count. Remember that admissions readers value authenticity above all — write in your own voice, tell your own stories, and trust that who you genuinely are is exactly what they want to discover.