Ace Essays: Foundation Academic Writing & Ethical Ai Prompts
Published 6/2025
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 1.49 GB | Duration: 11h 57m
Published 6/2025
MP4 | Video: h264, 1280x720 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 1.49 GB | Duration: 11h 57m
Master Academic Essays with Ethical AI for Native & ESOL Undergraduate Learners
What you'll learn
Understand the fundamentals of academic writing by exploring its purpose, structure, and key principles
Uphold academic integrity by identifying and avoiding plagiarism, cheating, collusion, fabrication, and falsification
Evaluate credible sources for academic research by assessing relevance, authority, and bias
Apply ethical AI prompts to refine essays while maintaining originality
Develop research skills by mastering strategies for efficient database searches and keyword techniques
Select focused and researchable topics by narrowing broad ideas into specific questions
Adopt an academic style with formal tone and precise language to enhance clarity and professionalism in essays
Create compare-and-contrast analyses using Venn diagrams to organize similarities and differences
Structure coherent and cohesive essays by crafting logical paragraphs with topic and concluding sentences
Write engaging introductions and impactful conclusions to frame academic essays effectively
Craft clear and arguable thesis statements to guide academic essays, ensuring focus and specificity
Paraphrase and synthesize source material accurately to avoid plagiarism and build cohesive argument
Balance writer’s voice with hedging language to qualify claims appropriately in academic writing
Use proper referencing techniques to cite sources accurately, ensuring academic integrity in all written assignments
Requirements
Students need sufficient English skills to engage with university-level content, making the course accessible for ESOL learners while at the same time being academically rigorous for native speakers.
Description
Transform your academic writing and ace your essays with this comprehensive, self-paced course designed for native and ESOL undergraduate learners! Whether you’re starting your university journey or refining your skills, this course equips you with foundational academic writing techniques, ethical AI prompts, and academic integrity principles to excel in scholarly assignments. Learn to craft compelling essays while leveraging AI responsibly to enhance your work without compromising originality.What You’ll Learn:Master Essay Essentials: Develop clear thesis statements, engaging introductions, logical paragraphs, and impactful conclusions using academic style, coherence, and cohesion.Uphold Academic Integrity: Understand and avoid plagiarism, cheating, collusion, fabrication, and falsification to maintain ethical writing practices.Research Like a Pro: Hone research skills, evaluate credible sources, and synthesize information to build persuasive arguments.Leverage Ethical AI: Use AI prompts as an assistant to refine your writing, ensuring you do the core work while fine-tuning for clarity, precision, and impact.Advanced Techniques: Master paraphrasing, hedging language, reporting verbs, compare-and-contrast analysis (using Venn diagrams), and referencing (APA, MLA, Chicago) to elevate your writer’s voice, etc.Build Argumentation: Craft evidence-based arguments, address counterarguments, and use topic/concluding sentences for seamless flow.Course Highlights:18 In-Depth Lessons: Covering everything from choosing a topic to referencing, tailored for undergraduates seeking practical, university-level skills.Ethical AI Integration: Learn how to use AI prompts to enhance your writing process, as outlined in most lessons, while maintaining academic rigor and originality.Real-World Application: Apply skills to essays like the sample on technology in education, mastering structure, style, and citations.Flexible Learning: Designed for native and ESOL learners, with clear, accessible content to support diverse language backgrounds.Why Enroll? This course empowers you to produce stellar academic essays that stand out in university settings. Through hands-on lessons, you’ll gain confidence in research, argumentation, and ethical AI use, all while building skills for academic and professional success. Perfect for undergraduates, including first-year students, aiming to improve grades, prepare for advanced coursework, or navigate ESOL challenges in academic writing.Who Is This Course For?Native and ESOL undergraduates seeking to master foundational academic writing.Students wanting to integrate ethical AI tools into their writing process responsibly.Learners aiming to strengthen research, referencing, and integrity skills for university success.No prior experience is required—just a passion for improving your writing! Join now to ace your essays, uphold academic integrity, and unlock your scholarly potential with ethical AI support.
Overview
Section 1: Introduction
Lecture 1 Introduction Video-Ace Essays: Foundation Academic Writing & Ethical AI Prompts
Section 2: Understanding Academic Integrity
Lecture 2 Lesson Introduction
Lecture 3 Welcome to Academic Integrity
Lecture 4 Section 1: Understanding Academic Misconduct
Lecture 5 Defining Academic Integrity
Lecture 6 Why Academic Integrity Matters
Lecture 7 Section 2: Identifying and Avoiding Plagiarism
Lecture 8 Understanding Plagiarism
Lecture 9 Avoiding Plagiarism: Citation and Referencing
Lecture 10 Paraphrasing and Summarising Effectively - Overview
Lecture 11 Additional Questions
Lecture 12 Real-World Scenario: Plagiarism in Journalism
Lecture 13 Advanced Citation Techniques
Lecture 14 When citing a video, what information is needed? Select all that apply (four).
Lecture 15 Section 3: Other Forms of Academic Dishonesty
Lecture 16 Cheating: A Breach of Trust
Lecture 17 Other Forms of Academic Dishonesty
Lecture 18 Real-World Scenario: Cheating in Online Exams
Lecture 19 Data Fabrication: Inventing the Truth
Lecture 20 Section 4: Strategies for Maintaining Academic Integrity
Lecture 21 Strategies for Maintaining Academic Integrity: Planning and Time Management
Lecture 22 Strategies for Maintaining Academic Integrity: Note-Taking and Source Management
Lecture 23 Strategies For Managing Academic Integrity
Lecture 24 Strategies for Maintaining Academic Integrity: Seeking Help and Support
Lecture 25 The Role of Technology in Academic Integrity
Lecture 26 Exploring Cultural Differences in Academic Integrity
Lecture 27 Cultural Influence & Strategy
Lecture 28 Preparing for Future Assignments
Lecture 29 Understanding the Consequences of Academic Dishonesty
Lecture 30 Promoting a Culture of Academic Integrity
Lecture 31 Review and Reflection
Lecture 32 Addressing Common Misconceptions and Answering Your Questions
Lecture 33 Reviewing Your Work and Getting Feedback
Section 3: Research Skills
Lecture 34 Introduction to Research Skills & Technology in Education
Lecture 35 Section 1: Getting Started with Research Skills
Lecture 36 Definitions & Terminology
Lecture 37 Section 2: Applying Source Evaluation
Lecture 38 Acceptable Secondary Sources and Their Purpose
Lecture 39 General Important Information
Lecture 40 Critical Assessment of Secondary Sources
Lecture 41 Real-World Application: A Research Journey
Lecture 42 Section 3: Finding and Using Academic Resources
Lecture 43 Effective Research Techniques and Source Evaluation
Lecture 44 Evaluating Secondary Resources: Academic vs. Non-Academic
Lecture 45 Differentiating Source Quality for Better Research
Lecture 46 Introduction to Library Database Searching
Lecture 47 Mastering Library Database Searches
Lecture 48 Section 4: Applying Your Search Skills
Lecture 49 Using Google Scholar Video
Lecture 50 Google Scholar Tips
Lecture 51 Google Scholar Search Refinement Techniques
Lecture 52 Enhancing Google Scholar Searches with Operators
Lecture 53 Google Scholar: Expanding Search Scope
Lecture 54 Google Scholar: Wildcards and Reference Lists
Lecture 55 Hands-On Practice: Searching Google Scholar
Lecture 56 Scenario: Evaluating Conflicting Information
Section 4: Evaluating Sources
Lecture 57 Evaluating Sources Introduction
Lecture 58 Evaluating Sources Introduction
Lecture 59 Evaluating Sources Objectives
Lecture 60 Section 1: Key Questions for Evaluating Sources
Lecture 61 Warm-up Activities
Lecture 62 The Importance of Evaluating Sources - Video
Lecture 63 Importance of Evaluating Sources
Lecture 64 Section 2: Understanding the CRAAP Test
Lecture 65 Understanding the CRAAP Test
Lecture 66 Deep Dive into CRAAP Criteria
Lecture 67 Authority and Accuracy
Lecture 68 Purpose and Bias
Lecture 69 Section 3: Applying the CRAAP Method
Lecture 70 Understanding Bias Awareness
Lecture 71 CRAAP Evaluation Review
Lecture 72 Evaluating the DHMO Source
Lecture 73 Review of Evaluation Criteria
Lecture 74 Section 4: Applying Your Evaluation Skills
Lecture 75 Conclusion
Section 5: Choosing a Topic
Lecture 76 Choosing a Topic Introduction - Video
Lecture 77 Section 1: Identifying and Refining Your Topic
Lecture 78 Introduction to Choosing a Research Topic
Lecture 79 Why Choosing and Narrowing Your Research Topic Matters
Lecture 80 Identifying Broad Areas of Interest
Lecture 81 Achieving Your Research Goals
Lecture 82 Navigating Information Overload: Narrowing Your Topic
Lecture 83 Section 2: Formulating and Testing Your Research Question
Lecture 84 Narrowing Down a Broad Topic
Lecture 85 Mix and Match: Combining Elements for a Focused Topic
Lecture 86 Section 3: Applying Narrowing Techniques
Lecture 87 Real-World Application: Case Studies
Lecture 88 Section 4: Testing Your Research Question's Viability
Lecture 89 Refining Your Research Question
Lecture 90 Revising and Tweaking Your Question
Lecture 91 Problems Encountered After Deciding on a Research Question
Lecture 92 Facing Research Challenges - Video
Lecture 93 Facing Research Challenges - Issues & Solutions
Lecture 94 Ethical AI Prompt - Research / Essay Title
Section 6: Academic Style
Lecture 95 Exploring Key Academic Style Characteristics
Lecture 96 Introduction Video: Academic Style
Lecture 97 Objectivity, Formality & Academic Style Definitions
Lecture 98 Objectivity in Academic Writing
Lecture 99 Exercise 1: Identifying Subjective Language
Lecture 100 Section 2: Understanding and Applying Formality
Lecture 101 Formality in Academic Writing
Lecture 102 Guidelines for Formality (Continued)
Lecture 103 Maintaining Formality: Verbs and Emotional Language
Lecture 104 Sample Answers for Formality Practice Exercises
Lecture 105 Vocabulary Enhancement for Academic Writing
Lecture 106 Section 3: Understanding Precision and Responsibility
Lecture 107 Exercise 3: Rewriting Sentences in Academic Style
Lecture 108 Exercise 3 Answers
Lecture 109 Exercise 4: Applying Academic Style
Lecture 110 Ethical AI Prompt - Academic Style
Section 7: Compare & Contrast Essay
Lecture 111 What is a Compare and Contrast Essay?
Lecture 112 Structuring and Planning Your Essay
Lecture 113 Understanding Compare and Contrast Essays - Video
Lecture 114 Compare and Contrast Essays Continued
Lecture 115 Defining a Venn Diagram
Lecture 116 Task 1: Selecting Points of Comparison
Lecture 117 Two Sample Compare/Contrast Essays - Point by Point & Block
Lecture 118 Section 2: Essay Structure and Thesis Statements
Lecture 119 Video: Structuring a Compare and Contrast Essay
Lecture 120 Structuring a Compare and Contrast Essay
Lecture 121 Understanding Essay Structure
Lecture 122 Essay Structure: A Closer Look
Lecture 123 Introduction: Crafting Effective Thesis Statements (Covered in a Later Lesson)
Lecture 124 Comparison Signal Words: Showing Similarities
Lecture 125 Unpacking Contrast Signal Words
Lecture 126 Contrast (difference) Signal Words List
Lecture 127 Section 3: Analysing Sample Essays and Practice Activities
Lecture 128 Analysing a Sample Compare and Contrast Essay
Lecture 129 Supplementary Activity: Venn Diagram Practice
Lecture 130 Ethical AI Prompt – Structural Integrity for Compare/Contrast Essay
Section 8: Paragraph Structure
Lecture 131 Introduction to Paragraph Structure
Lecture 132 Section 1: Dissecting the Paragraph: Key Components
Lecture 133 Video: Foundations of Paragraph Structure
Lecture 134 Foundations of Paragraph Structure Continued
Lecture 135 The Fundamental Components of a Paragraph
Lecture 136 Section 2: Crafting Effective Topic Sentences
Lecture 137 Understanding Topic Sentences
Lecture 138 Section 3: Supporting Sentences: Building the Paragraph's Core
Lecture 139 Developing Supporting Sentences
Lecture 140 Video: How to Write an Effective Topic Sentence
Lecture 141 Effective Topic Sentences Continued
Lecture 142 Section 4: Concluding Sentences and Paragraph Unity
Lecture 143 Crafting Effective Concluding Sentences
Lecture 144 5 Example Paragraphs
Lecture 145 Achieving Paragraph Unity and Coherence
Lecture 146 Transition Expressions Table
Lecture 147 Section 5: Refining Paragraphs for Academic Style and Coherence
Lecture 148 Mastering Academic Style in Paragraphs
Section 9: Argumentative Essay Writing
Lecture 149 Introduction to Argumentative Essays
Lecture 150 Video - Understanding Argumentative Essays
Lecture 151 Understanding Argumentative Essays - Continued
Lecture 152 Section 1: Building a Strong Argument: Thesis Statements and Evidence
Lecture 153 Exploring Argumentative Essay Topics
Lecture 154 What Makes an Argumentative Essay Unique
Lecture 155 Section 2: Crafting a Powerful Thesis Statement
Lecture 156 Video: Developing Supporting Arguments
Lecture 157 Developing Supporting Arguments Continued
Lecture 158 Examining Essay Organization
Lecture 159 2 Sample Argumentative Essay Examples: Block & Point By Point Styles
Lecture 160 Analysing a Model Argumentative Essay
Lecture 161 Section 3: Refining Your Argumentative Essay
Lecture 162 Writing Techniques: Crafting Effective Introductions and Thesis Statements
Lecture 163 Enhancing Persuasion with Language
Lecture 164 Section 4: Revising and Polishing Your Argumentative Essay
Lecture 165 Writing Argument Essays: Organizing Ideas
Lecture 166 Questions about Synthesis
Lecture 167 Critical Thinking: Organising Ideas for Persuasion
Lecture 168 Selecting a Body Paragraph Structure
Lecture 169 3 Sample Argumentative Paragraphs - Showing the Three Structure Types
Lecture 170 Stating and Supporting Your Main Argument
Lecture 171 Synthesizing Citations, Evidence, and Explanation
Lecture 172 Synthesizing Arguments and Citations: Paragraph Construction
Lecture 173 Writing an Argument Essay: A Comprehensive Guide
Lecture 174 Sample Argumentative Essays - Including Arguent Parahraph Structures
Lecture 175 Ethical AI Prompt: Argumentative Essay Structure Including Paragraph Types
Section 10: Topic & Concluding Sentences in Academic Writing
Lecture 176 Topic and Cocluding Sentences in Academic Writing
Lecture 177 Section 1: Understanding Topic Sentences
Lecture 178 Video: Topic and Concluding Sentences
Lecture 179 Topic and Concluding Sentences Explained
Lecture 180 Deconstructing the Topic Sentence: Topic and Controlling Idea
Lecture 181 Key Learning Outcomes
Lecture 182 Section 2: Analysing and Identifying Topic Sentences
Lecture 183 Topic Sentences Worksheet
Lecture 184 Task One: Analyzing Topic Sentences
Lecture 185 Task 2: Writing Appropriate Topic Sentences
Lecture 186 Answers for the Create Topic Sentences Exercise
Lecture 187 Section 3: Refining Your Topic Sentences
Lecture 188 Two Sample Paragraphs with Topic Sentences
Lecture 189 Section 4: Understanding Concluding Sentences
Lecture 190 Video: Understanding Concluding Sentences
Lecture 191 Understanding Concluding Sentences Continued
Lecture 192 The 'Hamburger Structure' of Academic Writing
Lecture 193 Crafting Effective Concluding Sentences
Lecture 194 Mastering Concluding Sentences: Functions and Summarising Skills
Lecture 195 Analyzing Paragraph Structure: Topic, Support, and Summary
Lecture 196 Task 2: Crafting Concluding Sentences
Section 11: Writing Introductions
Lecture 197 Essay Introductions: Crafting Your Opening
Lecture 198 Video - Essay Introductions
Lecture 199 Section 1: Understanding the Purpose and Key Components of Essay Introductions
Lecture 200 The Foundation: Purpose and Elements of Your Introduction
Lecture 201 The Crucial Role of Background Information in Your Introduction
Lecture 202 Model Introduction Paragraphs With Component Breakdowns
Lecture 203 The Thesis Statement: Your Essay's Guiding Star
Lecture 204 Section 2: Completing Your Introduction: Hook, Definitions, and Roadmap
Lecture 205 Video: Thesis Statements
Lecture 206 Strengthening Your Introduction: The Thesis Statement in Action
Lecture 207 Deconstructing an Effective Introduction
Lecture 208 Deconstructing a Model Introduction
Lecture 209 Deconstructing a Model Introduction: Identify the Function
Lecture 210 Section 3: Refining Your Introduction: Avoiding Common Mistakes
Lecture 211 Crafting a Compelling Introduction: A Scenario
Lecture 212 Task 5: Use the student's notes below write and introduction
Lecture 213 Answer: Task 5 Sample Introduction
Lecture 214 Reviewing and Refining Your Introduction - Seeking Feedback
Lecture 215 Ethical AI Prompt: Writing Introductions
Section 12: Writing Effective Thesis Statements
Lecture 216 Crafting Powerful Thesis Statements
Lecture 217 Crafting Thesis Statements Components
Lecture 218 Understanding the Core: What is a Thesis Statement?
Lecture 219 Section 1: Constructing Effective Thesis Statements
Lecture 220 Identifying Your Thesis Topic
Lecture 221 The Claim
Lecture 222 Section 2: Adding Nuance: The Qualification
Lecture 223 Video: The Power of Qualification in Academic Writing
Lecture 224 Qualification in Academic Writing
Lecture 225 3. The Art of Qualification: Adding Nuance to Your Thesis
Lecture 226 Section 3 Supporting Your Stance: The Reason
Lecture 227 4. The Reason: Justifying Your Stance
Lecture 228 Section 4: Synthesising the Elements: Constructing the Complete Thesis Statement
Lecture 229 Combining the Elements: Crafting Your Complete Thesis Statement
Lecture 230 Further Examples: Deconstructing Thesis Statements
Lecture 231 Identifying and Correcting Flawed Thesis Statements
Lecture 232 True or False: Testing Your Thesis Knowledge
Lecture 233 Extension Activity: Practising Thesis Statements
Lecture 234 Sample Answers for Practising Thesis Statements
Lecture 235 Ethical AI Prompt: Evaluating Thesis Statements
Section 13: Referencing - Reference Lists
Lecture 236 Introduction: Getting Started with Chicago Style Referencing
Lecture 237 The Power of Proper Referencing: Understanding Chicago Style
Lecture 238 Section 1: Crafting Your Chicago Style Reference List
Lecture 239 Video: The Reference List
Lecture 240 Mastering the Chicago Style Reference List
Lecture 241 Fundamental Rules for Chicago Style Reference Lists
Lecture 242 Arranging Your Reference List: The Correct Order
Lecture 243 Section 2: Beyond the Basics: Citing Diverse Sources
Lecture 244 Evaluating the Value of Your Research Sources
Lecture 245 Unpacking Primary and Secondary Sources
Lecture 246 Why Referencing Matters - Short Introduction to In-Text Citations
Lecture 247 Reference List vs. Bibliography: A Clear Distinction
Lecture 248 Reference List Types | Formatting Rules | Examples & Element Order
Section 14: Chicago Style In-Text Citations & Reporting Verbs
Lecture 249 In-Text Citations & Reporting Verbs
Lecture 250 Video - Introduction to In-Text Citations
Lecture 251 In-Text Citations Continued
Lecture 252 In-Text Citation Basics
Lecture 253 Example Paragraphs Demonstrating Chicago Author-Date In-Text Citations
Lecture 254 Section 1: Mastering the Bibliography: Your Complete Reference List
Lecture 255 Video: Reporting Verbs
Lecture 256 Reporting Verbs Continued
Lecture 257 Introduction to Reporting Verbs
Lecture 258 Reporting Verb Functions
Lecture 259 Task 1a: Identifying Reporting Verbs
Lecture 260 Task 1b: Classifying Reporting Verbs
Lecture 261 Task 2: Improving Verb Choice
Lecture 262 Section 2: Advanced Reporting Verbs: Tense, Grammar, and Common Pitfalls
Lecture 263 Video: Reporting Verb Grammar
Lecture 264 Reporting Verb Grammar Continued
Lecture 265 Tense in Reporting Verbs
Lecture 266 Grammar of Reporting Verbs
Lecture 267 Task 3: Identifying Verb Patterns: Agree, Analyse & Demonstrate
Lecture 268 Section 3: Refining Your Reporting Verb Use: Common Errors and Best Practices
Lecture 269 Applying Reporting Verbs: Practical Exercises
Lecture 270 Ethical AI Prompt: Chicago Style In-Text Citations & Reporting Verbs
Section 15: Paraphrasing
Lecture 271 Introduction to Paraphrasing
Lecture 272 Video: Introduction to Paraphrasing
Lecture 273 Getting Started with Paraphrasing
Lecture 274 Video: Objectivity and Formality in Academic Writing Short Review
Lecture 275 Objectivity and Formality Continued
Lecture 276 Section 1: Paraphrasing Techniques: Synonyms, Word Order, and Voice
Lecture 277 Understanding Summarising and Paraphrasing
Lecture 278 Paraphrasing Techniques
Lecture 279 Examples Paraphrasing Techniques: four ways
Lecture 280 Active to Passive Voice
Lecture 281 Changing Word Forms and Sentence Transformation
Lecture 282 Video: Mastering Paraphrasing Techniques
Lecture 283 Mastering Paraphrasing Techniques Continued
Lecture 284 Section 2: Avoiding Plagiarism: Common Mistakes and Best Practices
Lecture 285 Understanding Plagiarism
Lecture 286 Writing a Good Paraphrase
Lecture 287 Steps to Paraphrasing Effectively
Lecture 288 Completing Your Paraphrase: A Step-by-Step Guide
Lecture 289 Choosing the Best Paraphrase
Lecture 290 Writing Paraphrases
Lecture 291 Completing Your Paraphrase
Lecture 292 Section 3: Real-World Applications and Practice
Lecture 293 Using Paraphrases as Support: A Real-World Example
Section 16: Writer's Voice or Academic Voice
Lecture 294 Writer's Voice or Academic Voice
Lecture 295 Video: Understanding Writer's Voice in Academic Writing
Lecture 296 Understanding Writer's Voice
Lecture 297 Section 1: Identifying and Applying Your Writer's Voice
Lecture 298 Defining Your Academic Voice
Lecture 299 Examples of Writer's Voice and Referencing in Academic Texts
Lecture 300 Section 2: Strategies for Asserting Your Academic Voice
Lecture 301 Video: Identifying Writer's Voice in Academic Texts
Lecture 302 Writer's Voice in Academic Texts
Lecture 303 Example Paragraphs Demonstrating Four Types of Writer's Voice
Lecture 304 Uncovering Interpretation and Analysis in Academic Voice
Lecture 305 Identifying Writer's Voice and Author's Contribution
Lecture 306 Section 3: Refining Your Voice: The Power of Cautious Language
Lecture 307 The Importance of Cautious Language
Lecture 308 Examples Demonstrating Cautious Language in Four Types of Writer's Voice
Lecture 309 Expressing Opinions with Caution and Objectivity
Lecture 310 Section 4: Integrating Your Voice and Cautious Language
Lecture 311 Adding Writer's Voice to Your Text
Lecture 312 Applying Writer's Voice: An Exercise
Lecture 313 Sample Answer for Exercise on the Previous Slide
Lecture 314 Ethical AI Prompt: Evaluating Writer's Voice
Section 17: Synthesizing Academic Sources
Lecture 315 Synthesizing Academic Sources
Lecture 316 Section 1 - Understanding Synthesis: Beyond Summarisation
Lecture 317 Video: Introduction to Synthesising Academic Sources
Lecture 318 Synthesising Academic Sources
Lecture 319 Paragraphs Demonstrating Three Types of Source Synthesis with In-Text Citations
Lecture 320 The Art of Synthesising Sources
Lecture 321 Evaluating and Analysing Sources
Lecture 322 Synthesising Information: A Step-by-Step Guide
Lecture 323 Video: Steps to Effective Synthesis
Lecture 324 Steps to Effective Synthesis Continued
Lecture 325 Evaluating Sources: Authority and Objectivity
Lecture 326 Section 2: Integrating Sources into Your Writing
Lecture 327 The Significance of Summarising and Contrasting Diverse Academic Views
Lecture 328 Analyzing Changes in Women's Prison Experiences
Lecture 329 Analysing Sources on Genetically Modified Foods
Lecture 330 Mastering Effective Note-Making
Lecture 331 Analysing a Student's Synthesis: A Real-World Example
Lecture 332 Analysing the Social Effects of Tourism in Developing Countries
Lecture 333 Now complete the table with the main ideas from the sources
Lecture 334 Section 3: Crafting Your Synthesized Argument
Lecture 335 Synthesising Diverse Viewpoints in a Paragraph
Lecture 336 Your Turn: Crafting a Synthesis Paragraph
Section 18: Coherence and Cohesion in Academic Writing
Lecture 337 Coherence and Cohesion in Academic Writing
Lecture 338 Section 1: Defining Coherence and Cohesion
Lecture 339 Video: Mastering Coherence and Cohesion
Lecture 340 Coherence and Cohesion Continued
Lecture 341 Distinguishing Coherence and Cohesion
Lecture 342 Section 2: Strategies for Enhancing Coherence
Lecture 343 Achieving Coherence in Academic Writing
Lecture 344 Coherence and Cohesion in Action: A Real-World Example
Lecture 345 Section 3: Strategies for Enhancing Cohesion
Lecture 346 Video: Modelling Coherence in Writing
Lecture 347 Modelling Coherence in Writing Continued
Lecture 348 Achieving Cohesion in Academic Writing
Lecture 349 Section 4: Strategies for Enhancing Cohesion: Lexical Signposts
Lecture 350 Reference Words for Cohesion
Lecture 351 Substitution and Ellipsis: Refining Your Academic Voice
Lecture 352 Conjunctions and Transitions: Weaving Your Ideas Together
Lecture 353 Lexical Cohesion: Weaving Ideas with Vocabulary
Lecture 354 Practice Makes Perfect: Refining Your Writing
Lecture 355 Sharpen Your Skills: A Reference Practice Activity
Lecture 356 Answers: Reference Practice Activity
Lecture 357 Task 2: Identify an example of substitution in this text
Lecture 358 Task 2 Answers
Lecture 359 Practice Activity: Ellipsis with Zero Substitution
Lecture 360 Answer: Elipses With Zero Substitution
Lecture 361 Task: Identify Conjunctions and Transitions
Lecture 362 Task: Practising Lexical Cohesion
Section 19: Academic Essay Conclusions
Lecture 363 Writing Effective Concluding Paragraphs
Lecture 364 Section 1: Understanding the Purpose and Features of Essay Conclusions
Lecture 365 The Power of a Strong Conclusion
Lecture 366 The Power of a Strong Conclusion Continued
Lecture 367 Understanding the Essay Conclusion
Lecture 368 Key Elements of a Compelling Conclusion
Lecture 369 Section 2: Analysing and Evaluating Existing Conclusions
Lecture 370 Crafting a Comprehensive Conclusion: Beyond the Basics
Lecture 371 Crafting a Comprehensive Conclusion Continued
Lecture 372 Exercise: Identifying Conclusion Features
Lecture 373 Analysing Conclusion Elements
Lecture 374 Analysing Conclusion Features: An Exercise
Lecture 375 Section 3: Mastering Language and Structure in Conclusions
Lecture 376 Video: Identifying Language Used for Conclusions
Lecture 377 Identifying Language Used for Conclusions Continued
Lecture 378 Identifying Language for Conclusion Functions
Lecture 379 Analysing Conclusion B: Features and Suitability
Lecture 380 Analysing Conclusion C: Features and Suitability
Lecture 381 Section 4: Crafting Your Own Effective Conclusions
Lecture 382 Video: Crafting Your Own Effective Conclusions
Lecture 383 Crafting Your Own Effective Conclusions Continued
Lecture 384 Exercise: Crafting Your Own Conclusion
Lecture 385 Ethical AI Prompt: Evaluating Your Concluding Paragraph
Native and ESOL undergraduate learners, likely early university students (ages 18–24), needing foundational academic writing skills. However, the course would also be suitable for adults of any age wih a need or desire to learn academic writing.