The value of quality academic writing

Why pay a ghostwriter four hundred dollars or more to properly research and write a vital final paper? Some people claim that it is considerably better than failing a course for lack of writing skills. But what benefit does the student really get from the literary efforts made by the ghostwriter? Well, not much of anything except maybe a good note. Done correctly, an acclaimed ghostwriter can produce a ghostwritten thesis or dissertation to reflect the approximate academic potential of the student. That is why the ghostwriter must be chosen carefully from among the many self-proclaimed writers and experts who advertise their academic skills.

When you consider that a quality college education currently costs fifty thousand dollars or more, which only covers tuition, fees, books, and living expenses for four years of undergrad, the high additional cost of a ghostwriter may seem like quite outrageous. However, more than a few undergraduate and graduate students employ tutors, at forty dollars or more per hour, for studies that are beyond their level of adequate preparation. One sad thing is that most students, who graduate from high school, are ill-prepared for college-level writing. Presumably, a college freshman who is unable to write at a twelfth grade level after graduating from high school has actually written very little in his twelve years of free public education. So if that person hopes to graduate from a top-tier college, they have to do one of two things. The student quickly remediates and learns what he did not learn during the high school years, or finds someone who can do the work for him.

One way or another, the student who is paying the ear for a liberal college education that he is not ready to receive must find a viable means to do the required work and get better grades than simply passing. A good example of such a pragmatic approach to education was that of George W. Bush. Although his high school grades did not reflect any academic ability, he was admitted to Yale University simply because his very prominent father graduated from Yale. But while at Yale, George W. found more satisfaction in panty raids and frat antics than in getting good grades. According to reliable sources, George W’s father paid a tutor during his undergraduate years to make sure his son at least passed his courses.

George W. left Yale with a low “C” average without the ability to read, write, and do math at the college level. Then somehow he was admitted to an MBA program. According to other reliable sources, George actually achieved less than a 3.00 GPA in the business program he allegedly completed. So how did you manage to graduate? I assume it was the same method that he used to get discharged from the Texas Air National Guard without completing the required time of duty. Did you leave Yale not knowing how to write and subsequently complete a graduate business program that supposedly emphasized writing? Perhaps George employed a ghostwriter to complete all of his graduate writing assignments. It would be logical.

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