You have ideas. Now turn them into an argument.
You've done the hard part. You have direction. You've asked better questions. You're starting to form real ideas. But when it comes time to write...
Your thoughts feel scattered.
Your points don't quite connect.
And you're not sure what your actual argument is yet.
That's because clarity isn't the same as structure. And structure is what turns ideas into a strong, cohesive argument.
What This Tutorial Does:
Thesis Thinking shows you how to:
- turn your ideas into a clear, focused argument
- organize your thinking so your writing builds
- connect your points so they support one central claim
- move beyond "listing ideas" into real analysis
This isn't about writing better sentences.
--> It's about thinking in a way that makes writing easier.
What you get inside Thesis Thinking:
- a clear framework to turn your ideas into a focused argument
- a step-by-step process to move from scattered thoughts --> one central claim
- simple structures that show you how strong essays actually build
- real examples that make abstract ideas click - fast
- guided prompts that help you connect your points (instead of listing them)
- a repeatable method you can use for any essay
A COUPLE THINGS TO NOTE:
Thesis Thinking is:
- designed to be completed in an afternoon
- fully printable PDF - keep it open while you write
- the next step after Essay Relief: clarity --> structure
By the end, you won't just have ideas - you'll know exactly what
you're arguing and how every part of your essay fits together.


