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  1. ISEE Upper Level Essay
  2. Support ideas with relevant examples.

ISEE UPPER LEVEL • ESSAY

Support ideas with relevant examples.

Transform vague claims into compelling arguments by anchoring every idea in concrete, specific evidence.

SECTION 1

Why Examples Matter: A Brief History of Persuasion

The art of supporting ideas with evidence stretches back thousands of years. Ancient Greek and Roman orators understood that audiences are not persuaded by abstract claims alone — they need concrete examples that make ideas vivid and believable. Aristotle identified three pillars of persuasion: logos (logic), ethos (credibility), and pathos (emotion). All three depend on specific details to do their work. A claim without evidence is just an opinion, but a claim backed by a well-chosen example becomes an argument.

350 BCE
Aristotle's Rhetoric
Aristotle taught that persuasive speakers must supply paradeigma (examples) to prove their points. He distinguished between historical examples and invented illustrations.
1580
Montaigne's Personal Essays
Michel de Montaigne pioneered the personal essay form, weaving autobiographical anecdotes into philosophical reflections — proving that personal stories carry intellectual weight.
1963
"I Have a Dream" Speech
Martin Luther King Jr. didn't just claim injustice existed. He cited specific scenes — children in Birmingham, police brutality, segregated restaurants — making his argument undeniable.
Today
ISEE Admissions Essays
Independent school admissions officers read hundreds of essays. The ones that stand out use specific, personal examples rather than generic statements, revealing character and depth of thought.

The core question has remained constant across millennia: How do you make someone believe what you're saying? The answer is always the same — you show them. On the ISEE essay, your job is not just to state what you think but to prove it through vivid, relevant examples drawn from your life, your reading, or your observations of the world.

SECTION 2

Core Principles of Effective Examples

Not all examples are created equal. A strong example does more than fill space — it illuminates your point, reveals your thinking, and makes the reader nod in agreement. Understanding the qualities that separate powerful examples from weak ones is the foundation of persuasive writing on the ISEE essay.

1

Specificity

Replace vague generalizations with precise details. Instead of 'I learned a lot from sports,' write 'During my sophomore basketball season, I missed a crucial free throw in the playoffs and spent the entire summer rebuilding my shooting form.'
2

Relevance

Every example must directly support the claim it follows. Ask yourself: 'Does this story actually prove my point, or is it just interesting?' If it doesn't connect, cut it — no matter how good it is.
3

Authenticity

Admissions readers value genuine reflection over impressive-sounding fiction. A sincere story about a small moment — helping a sibling with homework — often resonates more than a dramatic tale that feels exaggerated.
4

Insight

The strongest examples don't just describe what happened — they explain what you learned or why it mattered. The reflection after the story is where admissions officers see your maturity and self-awareness.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of your thesis statement as a skeleton and your examples as the muscles and skin that bring it to life. Without examples, your essay is just bare bones — structurally present but lifeless. With the right examples, your argument stands up, moves, and convinces the reader. Every body paragraph should contain at least one specific, relevant example that makes your thesis feel real and earned.
SECTION 3

Anatomy of a Well-Supported Paragraph

Every body paragraph in a strong ISEE essay follows a reliable pattern. You make a claim, support it with a concrete example, and then reflect on what that example proves. The diagram below shows this structure — often called the CER framework (Claim, Evidence, Reasoning) — in action. Study the flow from top to bottom to see how each layer builds on the one before it.

TOPIC SENTENCE / CLAIM"Perseverance shapes success more than natural talent."SPECIFIC EXAMPLE / EVIDENCE"Last spring, I auditioned for the school play three times beforebeing cast. Each rejection stung, but I used the feedback toimprove my monologue delivery and physical presence on stage."REASONING / REFLECTION"That experience taught me that failure is not the opposite ofsuccess — it is the pathway to it. Without those early rejections,I never would have developed the resilience I rely on today."TRANSITION TO NEXT PARAGRAPH"This lesson extends beyond the stage..."
The Claim (purple) states your point. The Evidence (cyan) provides the specific story. The Reasoning (green) explains why the example proves the claim. The Transition (amber) links to your next idea.

Notice that the example takes up the most space in the paragraph — and rightly so. The evidence is the engine of persuasion. Your claim tells the reader where you're going; your example takes them there. Without the reasoning layer at the bottom, however, the example is just an anecdote. The reflection is what transforms a story into an argument.

SECTION 4

How to Generate and Select Examples Under Time Pressure

You have only 30 minutes for the ISEE essay, so you need a fast, reliable method for generating strong examples. The best approach is what we call the Four-Category Brainstorm. When you see a prompt, immediately scan four categories of your life for possible examples. This prevents the common trap of staring at a blank page for five minutes.

1

Academic Life

A challenging class, a project that surprised you, a teacher who changed your perspective, a subject you struggled with and eventually mastered. These examples show intellectual curiosity.
2

Extracurriculars & Hobbies

Sports, music, debate, art, coding, volunteering — activities where you grew, failed, led, or collaborated. These examples reveal character and commitment.
3

Family & Community

Relationships with siblings, parents, neighbors, or mentors. Moments of responsibility, conflict resolution, or cultural tradition. These examples show empathy and self-awareness.
4

Books, Media & Current Events

A novel that challenged your assumptions, a documentary that opened your eyes, a historical event you studied deeply. These examples demonstrate breadth of thought.
🎯 ISEE STRATEGY
Before test day, prepare a mental 'example bank' of 5–8 vivid personal stories from across these four categories. Most ISEE prompts are broad enough that you can adapt a well-practiced story to fit. Planning ahead does not mean your essay will sound rehearsed — it means you won't waste precious minutes struggling to think of material.

Once you have two or three candidate examples, apply a quick selection test. Ask yourself three questions: Is it specific enough to include sensory details or concrete facts? Does it directly answer the prompt? Can I reflect meaningfully on what it reveals about me? If an example passes all three tests, use it. If it doesn't, move on.

SECTION 5

A Taxonomy of Examples for ISEE Essays

Understanding the different types of examples available to you expands your toolkit as a writer. Each type carries a different weight and serves a different purpose. The diagram below maps these types on a spectrum from personal and emotional to external and analytical. For the ISEE essay, you'll rely most heavily on the personal end, but mixing in an external reference can demonstrate intellectual range.

SPECTRUM OF EXAMPLE TYPESPERSONALEXTERNALPersonal AnecdoteA story from your own life.Most powerful for ISEE essays.★★★★★ ImpactObserved ExampleSomething you witnessed orexperienced secondhand.★★★★☆ ImpactLiteraryFrom a book, play,or poem you've read.★★★☆☆ ImpactHistoricalFrom history, science,or current events.★★☆☆☆ Impact✓ STRONG PERSONAL EXAMPLE"When I volunteered at the food bank last December,I noticed an elderly man organizing canned goods withmeticulous care — it changed how I view dignity in service."✗ WEAK GENERIC STATEMENT"Volunteering is important because it helpspeople and teaches you things. Everyone shouldvolunteer more because it makes the world better."ISEE BEST PRACTICEUse 1–2 personal anecdotes as your primary evidence. Optionally add a literary orhistorical reference in one paragraph to show intellectual range and reading habits.
The spectrum ranges from personal anecdotes (highest impact for ISEE essays) to historical references (useful as supplementary evidence). Notice the contrast between the strong and weak examples at the bottom.

For the ISEE essay specifically, personal anecdotes are your most powerful weapon. Admissions officers want to know who you are, how you think, and what you value. A well-told personal story accomplishes all three goals simultaneously. External examples from books or history can supplement your personal stories, but they should rarely be your primary evidence on this particular test.

SECTION 6

From Prompt to Polished Paragraph: A Step-by-Step Walkthrough

Let's walk through the complete process of transforming a typical ISEE prompt into a body paragraph with a strong supporting example. This step-by-step breakdown mirrors what you should do on test day, compressed into a clear sequence.

Prompt: "What quality do you think is most important in a leader? Use specific examples to support your answer."

Step 1 — Choose Your Thesis

Spend 60 seconds deciding on a single quality. Avoid overused answers like 'confidence' or 'strength.' Consider more nuanced qualities: empathy, adaptability, humility, decisiveness. For this example, we'll choose the willingness to listen — it's specific enough to generate strong examples and mature enough to impress an admissions reader.
Thesis: The most important quality in a leader is the willingness to listen before acting.

Step 2 — Brainstorm Using the Four Categories

Quickly scan your mental example bank. Academic: a group project where a team leader ignored input and the project suffered. Extracurricular: when you became captain of the debate team and had to manage conflicting opinions. Family: how your parent resolved a family disagreement by hearing everyone out. Books: Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird listening to Scout's perspective.
Selected example: debate team captaincy (personal, specific, reflective potential).

Step 3 — Draft the Topic Sentence (Claim)

Your topic sentence should clearly state the paragraph's main point and connect it to your thesis. Avoid starting with 'I think' or 'In my opinion' — these weaken your voice. Instead, state your claim directly and confidently.
"A leader who listens transforms a group of individuals into a genuine team."

Step 4 — Write the Example with Specific Details

Now deliver the evidence. Include concrete details: names (or roles), settings, actions, and consequences. Aim for 3–4 sentences that paint a scene rather than summarize abstractly. Notice the sensory and specific language: 'regional tournament,' 'two teammates who disagreed sharply,' 'sat with each person individually.'
"When I became captain of my school's debate team last fall, I inherited a group preparing for the regional tournament with two teammates who disagreed sharply on our case strategy. Rather than imposing my own preference, I sat with each person individually during lunch to understand their reasoning."

Step 5 — Add Reasoning and Reflection

This is where you earn your maturity points. Explain why the example matters and what it reveals about leadership — or about you. Connect the specific story back to the general principle stated in your thesis. This layer is what separates a good paragraph from a great one.
"By listening first, I discovered that both perspectives had merit, and we crafted a hybrid approach that incorporated the strongest elements of each. Our team advanced further in competition than it had in three years. That experience showed me that listening is not passive — it is the most active and powerful thing a leader can do."
⏱ TIME CHECK
On the real ISEE, this entire process — from reading the prompt to finishing a body paragraph — should take about 6–7 minutes. With two body paragraphs, that's 12–14 minutes for your body, leaving 5 minutes for your intro, 5 for your conclusion, and 5 for planning and revision.
SECTION 7

Strong Examples vs. Weak Examples: A Side-by-Side Comparison

Understanding what makes an example effective requires seeing the difference between strong and weak attempts. The table below presents paired versions of the same idea — one vague and generic, the other vivid and specific. Study these contrasts to internalize the patterns that admissions readers reward.

Comparison of weak generic statements versus strong specific examples across four quality dimensions.
FeatureWeak ExampleStrong Example
Specificity"I've done a lot of volunteer work and it taught me many things about helping others.""Every Saturday last spring, I tutored third-graders in reading at the Elm Street Library and watched a shy boy named Marcus read his first complete chapter book aloud."
Relevance"I also like to play basketball, which is fun." (inserted in an essay about leadership)"As point guard, I learned to read my teammates' body language and adjust plays mid-game — a skill that directly translates to leading group discussions."
Authenticity"Winning the national science fair made me realize I could change the world.""My baking soda volcano fizzled at the school science fair, but the failure motivated me to study chemistry properly for the first time."
Reflection"It was a good experience and I learned a lot.""Standing in front of an audience and forgetting my lines taught me that preparation is not just about memorizing words — it's about understanding their meaning deeply enough to recover when things go wrong."
🔍 THE ZOOM-IN TEST
Here's a quick test for any example you write: imagine you're a camera. A weak example stays zoomed out — you see blurry shapes and hear general statements. A strong example zooms in close enough to see faces, hear specific words, and notice small details. If your example could apply to any student at any school, it's too zoomed out. Zoom in until it could only be about you.
SECTION 8

Elevating Your Examples: Advanced Techniques

Once you've mastered the basics of selecting and presenting examples, you can employ advanced techniques that separate exceptional essays from merely good ones. These strategies are particularly valuable for older students applying to competitive programs, where admissions readers expect sophistication and self-awareness.

Advanced writing techniques for elevating supporting examples in ISEE essays.
TechniqueDescriptionExample in Practice
The PivotStart with an example that seems to go one direction, then reveal a surprising lesson or outcome. Creates tension and rewards the reader's attention."I expected my summer job at the ice cream shop to be mindless work. Instead, managing the cash register during a power outage taught me more about problem-solving than any math class."
The CallbackReference an example from your first body paragraph in your conclusion, showing how the same experience connects to a broader truth. Creates structural cohesion."Just as Marcus turned the last page of that chapter book with a grin, I realized that the best leaders create moments where others discover their own strength."
The ContrastPresent two examples that show opposite outcomes — one where things went wrong and one where they went right — to illustrate the importance of your thesis."In ninth grade, I rushed through a group project without listening to my partners, and we earned a mediocre grade. The following year, I took the opposite approach..."
Sensory DetailInclude one or two sensory details — sounds, sights, textures — that immerse the reader in the moment. A small amount of description goes a long way."The gymnasium was silent except for the squeak of sneakers on the hardwood floor as I stepped to the free-throw line with three seconds left."

These techniques are more challenging to execute under time pressure, so practice them before test day. The Pivot and Sensory Detail techniques are particularly effective because they add depth without requiring extra length. Even adding a single vivid detail — the sound of rain, the smell of a classroom, the weight of a book — can transform a flat example into a memorable one.

SECTION 9

Practice Activities

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
Read the following ISEE essay prompt and model response. Then explain in 3–4 sentences what makes the example effective, referring to at least two of the four qualities (specificity, relevance, authenticity, insight). Prompt: "Describe a time when you had to adapt to a new situation. What did you learn from the experience?" Model Body Paragraph: "When my family moved from Austin to Boston the summer before eighth grade, I faced a classroom where everyone had known each other since kindergarten. On my first day, I sat alone at lunch, watching groups of friends laugh at inside jokes I didn't understand. Rather than retreating into silence, I decided to start a conversation with the boy across the table by asking about the Red Sox pennant on his backpack. That single question led to a friendship with Jake, who introduced me to the robotics club and became my lab partner in science class. Moving taught me that adaptation isn't about changing who you are — it's about finding the courage to reach out and trust that connection will follow."
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC CALCULATION
Planning Exercise: Read the following ISEE prompt, then create a complete outline with a thesis statement, two body paragraph claims, and one specific example for each claim. Prompt: "Your school is considering eliminating arts programs to fund more technology courses. Do you agree or disagree with this decision? Support your answer with specific examples."
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Planning Exercise: You receive this ISEE prompt: "What is one thing you would change about your school, and why?" Brainstorm using the Four-Category method. Write at least one potential example from each of the four categories (Academic, Extracurricular, Family/Community, Books/Media), then select the single strongest example and explain in 2–3 sentences why you chose it.
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
Revision Exercise: The following paragraph was written by a student responding to the prompt "Describe a person who has influenced you." Rewrite it to replace the vague statements with specific examples, add sensory detail, and include a reflection sentence. Original paragraph: "My grandmother has influenced me a lot. She is very wise and teaches me many things. She is always there for me and gives me good advice. I have learned a lot from her about life. She is the most influential person in my life and I am grateful for everything she has done."
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Full Essay Prompt: Write two complete body paragraphs responding to this ISEE prompt: "What three words would you use to describe yourself, and why?" Choose only two of your three words, and write one body paragraph for each. Each paragraph must contain a specific personal example using the CER framework (Claim, Evidence, Reasoning). Aim for 120–150 words per paragraph. Use at least one advanced technique (Pivot, Callback, Contrast, or Sensory Detail).
SUMMARY

Pulling It All Together

Supporting your ideas with relevant examples is the single most important skill for the ISEE essay. Every body paragraph should follow the CER framework — a clear Claim, a specific example drawn from your life or reading, and thoughtful Reasoning that connects the story back to your thesis. Use the Four-Category Brainstorm (Academic, Extracurricular, Family/Community, Books/Media) to generate material quickly under time pressure. Prepare a mental bank of 5–8 vivid stories before test day.

Strong examples pass the Zoom-In Test — they contain concrete names, settings, actions, and sensory details that could only come from your unique experience. Weak examples stay vague and generic. Elevate your writing with advanced techniques like the Pivot, Callback, Contrast, and Sensory Detail. Remember: admissions officers read hundreds of essays. The ones that stand out are those where every claim is proven by a specific, authentic, and reflective example. Show, don't tell — and your essay will speak for itself.

Varsity Tutors • ISEE Upper Level • Support ideas with relevant examples.