Liam
New member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2026
- Messages
- 17
I see a lot of people here asking about outlines, and I just wanted to share the method that got me through my undergrad and is now carrying me through my Master's. If your outlines aren't helping you write, you're probably not doing them right. You're just listing topics.
The trick? The Full-Sentence Outline.
Don't just write:
Here’s what I do. For every single paragraph, I write out its topic sentence as a full, complete sentence. For example, for a paper on economic causes of WW2:
Then, under each topic sentence in the outline, I'll paste the quotes or data I plan to use for that paragraph, with the citation already attached. Just bullet points of evidence.
When it’s time to write, I’m not creating anything new. I’m just taking that topic sentence and those bullet points of evidence, and I'm connecting the dots with analysis and transition sentences. It turns a 10-page paper from a creative nightmare into a technical exercise. It takes longer upfront (maybe 2-3 hours for a big paper), but it cuts my actual writing time in half and makes my arguments 10x stronger. Seriously, try it.
The trick? The Full-Sentence Outline.
Don't just write:
- Intro
- Background on WW2
- Economic factors
Here’s what I do. For every single paragraph, I write out its topic sentence as a full, complete sentence. For example, for a paper on economic causes of WW2:
- Intro Thesis: While military aggression was the spark, the Treaty of Versailles' punitive reparations and the subsequent global economic instability were the primary kindling that made a second world war inevitable.
- Body Para 1 (Topic Sentence): The staggering reparations imposed on Germany by the Treaty of Versailles directly crippled its economy, fostering hyperinflation and deep-seated national resentment.
- Body Para 2 (Topic Sentence): The global Great Depression, triggered by the 1929 stock market crash, further destabilized fragile European economies and fueled the rise of extremist political parties.
Then, under each topic sentence in the outline, I'll paste the quotes or data I plan to use for that paragraph, with the citation already attached. Just bullet points of evidence.
When it’s time to write, I’m not creating anything new. I’m just taking that topic sentence and those bullet points of evidence, and I'm connecting the dots with analysis and transition sentences. It turns a 10-page paper from a creative nightmare into a technical exercise. It takes longer upfront (maybe 2-3 hours for a big paper), but it cuts my actual writing time in half and makes my arguments 10x stronger. Seriously, try it.