by Jürgen Kress
To help you turn those resources into a great essay, I can definitely help with the heavy lifting. However, I’ll need a little more info to get the tone and content right. How we can get started:
While you're getting those details ready, here is how I recommend handling that much information:
(e.g., "The impact of microplastics on marine life" or "Themes of isolation in 19th-century literature"). We found 112 resources for you..
(If you had to summarize your argument in one sentence, what would it be?) A Quick "Game Plan" for 112 Resources:
Don't read all 112. Skim titles and abstracts first. Toss out anything that isn't directly related to your specific thesis statement . To help you turn those resources into a
Pick 3–5 high-quality sources (like peer-reviewed studies or foundational books) to be the backbone of your essay, and use the others for supporting "flavor" or statistics.
It sounds like you’ve just hit the jackpot with a research project or a massive data search! Having is a fantastic starting point, but it can also feel a bit like standing at the base of a mountain. (If you had to summarize your argument in
Once I know that, I can draft an outline or an introductory paragraph for you! AI responses may include mistakes. Learn more