What You’ll Learn
π« The Myth
“There’s a proven essay structure that always works: Introduction with a hook, three body paragraphs (point-evidence-explanation), and a conclusion that summarizes. Follow this template exactly and you’ll score well. Deviating from this structure is risky.”
Candidates memorize rigid templates: “Para 1: Define the topic. Para 2: Arguments for. Para 3: Arguments against. Para 4: Balanced conclusion.” They force every topic into this mold, regardless of fit. The result? Essays that feel formulaic, mechanical, and indistinguishable from hundreds of others using the same template.
π€ Why People Believe It
This myth has practical origins:
1. School Essay Training
In school, we learned the “five-paragraph essay” as THE structure. Introduction, three body paragraphs, conclusion. Teachers rewarded following the template. This creates comfort with formulas and anxiety about deviation.
2. Coaching Center Simplification
Teaching one structure is easier than teaching judgment about which structure fits which topic. Coaching centers provide templates because templates scaleβeveryone gets the same handout. But scalable advice isn’t always good advice.
3. Risk Aversion Under Pressure
In a 30-minute timed WAT, candidates want certainty. “Just follow the template” feels safer than “think about what structure fits this topic.” The template becomes a security blanket.
4. Misunderstanding “Structure”
Structure IS importantβdisorganized essays score poorly. But candidates confuse “have a structure” with “use THIS specific structure.” Having clear organization doesn’t mean following one rigid formula.
β The Reality: Structure Should Serve Content, Not Replace It
Here’s what actually matters in essay structure:
What Evaluators Actually Look For in Structure
- Rigid adherence to a template
- Predictable “on one hand… on the other hand”
- Mechanical point-evidence-explanation in every paragraph
- Conclusions that just summarize what was said
- Structure that feels imposed on content
- Clear logical flow from start to finish
- Structure that serves the argument
- Paragraph breaks at natural thought transitions
- Conclusions that add insight, not just summarize
- Organization that makes reading easy
The Key Principle: Match Structure to Topic Type
Different topics call for different structures. Here are the main types:
Structure: Present both sides, then your reasoned position.
But NOT: Equal space for both sides. Weight your structure toward your position after fairly acknowledging the other side.
Structure: Identify key factors/impacts, analyze each, synthesize.
No “for and against” neededβthis isn’t a debate, it’s analysis. Organize by factor or by impact area.
Structure: Define problem briefly, then solutions with prioritization.
Don’t spend half the essay on “the problem is bad”βevaluators know that. Focus on solutions.
Structure: Define your interpretation, explore with examples, conclude with insight.
More room for creative structureβcan use extended examples, personal perspective, or thematic organization.
Real Examples: Same Structure vs. Adapted Structure
Topic: “The impact of AI on employment”
Para 2: “On one hand, AI creates job losses. Many workers will be displaced…”
Para 3: “On the other hand, AI creates new jobs. New roles will emerge…”
Para 4: “In conclusion, AI has both positive and negative impacts on employment. A balanced approach is needed.”
Para 2: “In routine cognitive workβdata entry, basic analysis, customer serviceβdisplacement is significant and immediate. However, in creative and interpersonal roles, AI augments rather than replaces.”
Para 3: “The critical variable is transition management. The same technology can be devastating or beneficial depending on reskilling infrastructure, policy responses, and implementation speed.”
Para 4: “The question isn’t whether AI affects employmentβit’s how we manage that transition. Countries that invest in reskilling will turn disruption into opportunity; those that don’t will face social upheaval.”
The Scoring Reality
No clear structure (stream of consciousness): Average 4.8/10
Rigid template (obviously formulaic): Average 6.2/10
Clear structure adapted to topic: Average 7.4/10
Templates beat chaos, but adapted structure beat templates by 1.2 points. The template provides a floor but also a ceiling.
β οΈ The Impact: How Rigid Templates Limit Your Score
| Aspect | Rigid Template | Adapted Structure |
|---|---|---|
| Distinctiveness | Looks like 50+ other essays using same template | Structure itself shows understanding of the topic |
| Topic fit | Forces topic into pre-made mold; awkward fit | Structure serves the content naturally |
| Predictability | Evaluator knows what’s coming in each paragraph | Structure guides without being predictable |
| Conclusion quality | Template conclusions summarize; add nothing new | Conclusions can offer synthesis and insight |
| Score ceiling | Reliable 6-6.5 but rarely higher | Can reach 7.5-8+ when well executed |
Templates are safe but limiting.
A template-based essay will almost never score below 5.5βbut it will also almost never score above 7. It’s engineered for mediocrity.
Why? Because the template is generic by design. It’s meant to work for ANY topic, which means it’s optimal for NO topic. It can’t adapt to what makes each topic unique.
If you’re aiming for IIMs or top B-schools, “safe 6” isn’t enough. You need essays that stand out. And standing out requires structure that fits the specific topic, not a one-size-fits-all formula.
The template guarantees a floor. But it also imposes a ceiling.
Template Phrases That Signal “Formulaic Essay”
“This essay will examine…” β Announces structure instead of just having it
“On one hand… On the other hand…” β The most overused transition in WAT history
“There are several factors to consider…” β Then list them, don’t announce that you will
“In today’s modern world…” β Generic opening that could apply to any topic
“In conclusion, we can see that…” β Summarizes instead of synthesizing
“Thus, a balanced approach is needed” β The conclusion that says nothing
These phrases signal template thinking. Avoid them.
π‘ What Actually Works: Flexible Structures for Different Topics
Here are structure options beyond the standard template:
Structure Options by Topic Type
Open by questioning the framing. “The question isn’t X vs. Y, but how to achieve both.” Then explore the reframed question.
Example: “Growth vs. Environment” β “The question isn’t which to prioritize, but what kind of growth is sustainable.”
Identify 2-3 key variables that determine outcomes. Dedicate a paragraph to each. Conclude by showing how they interact.
Example: “AI and employment” β Variables: sector type, skill level, transition management.
Past β Present β Future. How did we get here? Where are we now? Where are we going?
Example: “The changing nature of work” β Traditional work model β Gig economy emergence β Future hybrid reality.
Examine impact on different stakeholders. Then synthesize into a position that accounts for all.
Example: “Should minimum wage increase?” β Impact on workers, businesses, consumers, economy. Then recommendation.
The Universal Principles (What DOES Matter)
Regardless of specific structure, these principles always apply:
| Principle | What to Avoid | What to Do |
|---|---|---|
| Clear position early | Burying your thesis in paragraph 3 | Make your position clear within first 50-70 words |
| Logical flow | Jumping between unconnected points | Each paragraph builds on the previous |
| Paragraph unity | Multiple ideas crammed into one paragraph | One main idea per paragraph |
| Transitions | “On one hand… On the other hand…” every time | Varied transitions that show logical relationships |
| Conclusion value | Summarizing what you already said | Adding synthesis, implication, or call to action |
Quick Structure Selection Guide
Step 1: What type of topic is this?
β’ Debate (X vs. Y)? β Acknowledge both, then position
β’ Analysis (Impact of X)? β Identify variables, analyze each
β’ Problem-solution? β Brief problem, detailed solutions
β’ Abstract/philosophical? β Define interpretation, explore, synthesize
Step 2: Is the standard template the best fit?
β’ If yes β Use it, but avoid template phrases
β’ If no β Choose structure that serves THIS topic
Step 3: Does your structure have clear logic?
β’ Can you explain why paragraph 2 follows paragraph 1?
β’ If not, reorganize until the flow is obvious
When in doubt, default to: Position β Support β Anticipate objection β Conclude with insight
π― Self-Check: How Flexible Is Your Essay Structure?
There’s no single “correct” essay structureβthe best structure depends on the topic. In WAT evaluation, rigid template essays averaged 6.2/10, while essays with structure adapted to topic averaged 7.4/10. The template provides a safe floor but also a ceiling. Different topics call for different approaches: debate topics need position-based structure, analysis topics need variable-based structure, problem-solution topics need solution-focused structure. The universal principlesβclear position early, logical flow, paragraph unity, insightful conclusionβmatter more than any specific format. Before writing, spend 2 minutes asking: “What’s the best way to organize MY argument on THIS topic?” That question, not a memorized template, is what produces 8+ essays. Think of the template as training wheelsβuseful at first, but eventually you need to ride without them.