Essay Topic Hub

Description
Essays

5,284+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

5,284 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Description as a mode of writing appears across nearly every academic discipline, making it one of the most fundamental skills students develop in English and composition courses. Unlike purely argumentative writing, descriptive work requires a writer to render a subject clearly and precisely so that a reader can form an accurate mental picture or understanding of it. What makes description academically interesting is its versatility: it can anchor analysis, support argument, and establish context. The sample papers here reflect that range, covering subjects as varied as aviation safety, homeless populations, software development methodologies, and consumer behavior, showing how descriptive writing operates across technical, social, and humanistic fields.

The approaches taken in papers on this topic vary considerably. Some focus on concrete physical environments, such as a hospital waiting room, where sensory detail and spatial organization carry the writing. Others take a more process-oriented angle, describing how systems, organizations, or methodologies function. Still others blend description with review or comparison, as seen in papers covering intercultural communication models, Romanticism as an artistic movement, and leadership frameworks like GLOBE. This variety reflects how description rarely exists in isolation but instead supports broader analytical or informational purposes.

A strong descriptive essay begins with a clearly scoped subject and a consistent point of focus, avoiding the common pitfall of cataloguing details without a controlling purpose. Evidence in descriptive writing typically takes the form of specific, well-chosen details rather than generalizations. Writers should ensure that every detail serves the essay's central aim, whether that is to inform, to analyze, or to argue, rather than simply listing observations without connecting them to a larger sense of meaning.

5,284 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Historiography on Four Works Written
¶ … historiography on four works written by four different authors. Each of these works depicts a time and place in the history of American slavery, and each makes unique and valid points regarding this "peculiar"…
Paper Undergraduate
Business Plan: Slow Wing Aircraft Operations in Brazil
This business plan provides an environmental assessment of Brazil, and identifies major logistics and supply chain management issues associated with setting up a wholly owned subsidiary in Brazil.
Paper Undergraduate
Love of the Many Universal
Of the many universal human themes that Toni Morrison explores in her novel Beloved, love -- especially the love of one's children -- is one of the most poignant and the most powerful.
Paper High School
Graffiti and Possible Solutions Graffiti
Graffiti is an increasingly expensive and annoying problem in cities, towns, and schools in America. It is technically called vandalism, and while it is not confined to one area of the United States, and many public and…
Paper Masters
Disgust in \"My Papa\'s Waltz\"
Love and hurt are two things we can never avoid and we often carry memories of both into adulthood. A poem that proves this bittersweet point is "My Papa's Waltz," by Theodore Roethke.
Paper Doctorate
Bioecological Theory and the Family and Community
According to Bronfenbrenner's bioecological theory, there are five environmental systems that an individual interacts with: 1. Microsystems – these are the institutions and groups that most directly impact the child's development and include family, school, community, and peers 2. Mesosystem - this refers to the relations between the different Microsystems, for instance the relation between th parents and the teachers/ school; or between the parents and the church, and so forth. These contexts too effect the child. 3. Exosystem - an external system of another may impact one of the ecosystems (or microsystems) of the child. For instance, the mother's work may impact the child's family life, or a teacher's challenging domestic situation may influence her teaching hence impacting child. 4. Macrosystem – this is the wider culture in which the child lives. These include developing and industrialized countries, socioeconomic status, poverty, and ethnicity . The larger cultural context shares a common identity and shapes thoughts, behavior, feelings of the child. The macrosystem also changes gradually and subtly over time due to its own often indiscernible influences. (Kail, & Cavanaugh, 2010). 5. Chronosystem: The external sociohistorical and personal events that happen to the child that impact him. For instance, divorce may negatively impact the child, particularly during the first year. As regards, sociohistorical changes, females have never had it better than now with the increase of tolerance and gender equality
Research Paper Doctorate
John Grierson the Documentary Film
The documentary film developed alongside the narrative film, though largely during the sound era. It was shaped most profoundly during the 1930s as filmmakers began to record sociological an anthropological studies of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Black Churches / New Pastors
What are the key issues surrounding the African-American Church in the year 2005? What should new pastors be learning as they train to become Christian leaders in their communities?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Sociology of Religion
¶ … Hanna Rosin's work Striking a Pose is a critical look at the exponential growth of the "yoga" movement in the United States. The work details information about yoga's exploding popularity as a form of both physical…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Passage to India Colonial India
Colonial India is a place of mystery and subterfuge. Situations of racial and ethnic strife, occurring long before the development of a British colonial India create a landscape that is worsened in some ways by the…