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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In three pages this paper evaluates a student essay featured in the compilation The St. Martin’s Guide to Writing. There are no additional sources listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGfitness.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
are several examples from novice writers and professionals such as popular horror genre novelist Stephen King. Sheila McClain wrote her causal speculation essay, "Fitness Culture: A Growing Trend in
America," as part of her freshman year college composition course. Within the course of her essay, which features the MLA citation style, McClain reveals four causes for this increasing
American fitness culture trend. Her structure features the traditional essay structure of introduction, body, and then a summary of main points in conclusion. McClains introduction appropriately sets the stage
for her causal speculation by identifying the trend and chronicling the dramatic increased interest in fitness throughout America since the 1990s, providing documented evidence of impressive fitness equipment sales during
this time period and in fitness club membership, particularly among individuals age 55 and older. Her next paragraph begins focusing on the four causes for this American obsession with
fitness. First, she credits increased public awareness, which she also attributes to the proper Internet source. She outlines the federal governments efforts to encourage physical fitness among Americans,
and describes how the additional public support from doctors and leading medical experts for the health benefits of exercise programs has reinforced a collective desire for wellness. She also
mentions that economic assistance from employers and health insurance providers in the sponsorship of fitness programs are also providing attractive incentives for people to become more physically fit (McClain 458).
The closing two sentences of the paragraph are designed to emphasize the first cause of increased public awareness. In the next paragraph, the author reveals a cultural motivation for
the fitness culture by describing the increasingly solitary nature of American life as more activities center on television, home computers, and video games (McClain 458). Being a member of
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