Every UK university student gets essay writing advice from the same places: study skills workshops, YouTube videos, and that one friend who got a First once. Some of it is solid. Some of it is quietly sabotaging your marks.
The problem is that lecturers don't always correct these myths. Not because they agree with them, but because marking 180 essays in a week doesn't leave time for individual coaching. So the bad advice persists, gets passed between students, and costs marks year after year.
Here are the five worst offenders.
The tell-tale sign of reference-stuffing is when every other sentence ends with a bracketed citation but none of them are critically discussed. "(Smith, 2020; Jones, 2019; Patel, 2021)" after a single claim isn't scholarship — it's decoration. What markers want to see is engagement: "Smith (2020) argues X; however, this conflicts with Jones's (2019) finding that Y, suggesting the relationship is more complex than either account allows."
The fix: For a 2,000-word essay, 10–15 genuinely engaged sources is plenty. More than that and you're probably not analysing any of them properly. SafeGrade's citation checker flags references that appear in your list but aren't meaningfully discussed in the text — a quick way to spot padding before your marker does.
"It could be argued that…" is weaker than "I argue that…" — the first hides behind passive construction, the second takes a position. When your marking rubric says "demonstrates independent critical thinking," your marker is looking for you in the essay. Passive, impersonal writing often reads as descriptive rather than analytical, which caps your grade around 2:2 territory.
The caveat: Not every discipline welcomes first person equally. Lab reports and some STEM subjects prefer impersonal voice. But in social sciences, humanities, and most essay-based modules, first person isn't just acceptable — it's expected at higher grade bands.
The fix: Use first person for your analytical claims ("I argue," "I contend," "in my analysis") and third person for descriptions of theory and evidence. This signals that you understand the difference between summarising someone else's work and contributing your own thinking.
Your introduction needs to do exactly three things: state your argument (thesis), outline the structure, and explain why the question matters. That's 100–150 words at most. Everything else is background that belongs in your body paragraphs or doesn't belong at all.
The common trap: Starting with a broad historical overview. "Since the dawn of civilisation, education has been…" — your marker has stopped reading. They know the history. They want to know what you think about the specific question in front of you.
The fix: Write your introduction last. Seriously. Write your body paragraphs first, then write an introduction that accurately describes what you actually argued — not what you planned to argue. SafeGrade's Improvement Suggestions will flag introductions that are disproportionately long relative to your word count.
Markers read hundreds of essays. The ones that are 2,200 words are almost always 2,200 words because the student couldn't edit. The padding is visible — repeated points, unnecessary qualifications, paragraphs that say the same thing in different words. An 1,850-word essay that makes five strong points with no filler is a more impressive read than a 2,200-word essay that makes the same five points buried in fluff.
The exception: If the assessment specifies "minimum 2,000 words" rather than "approximately 2,000 words," treat the minimum as the floor and aim for 2,000–2,100. But never pad to hit a number.
The fix: When you finish writing, do a "filler pass." Read each paragraph and ask: could I cut this by 20% without losing any argument? If yes, cut it. The essay will be tighter, the analysis will be clearer, and the marker will notice.
The difference between a 2:2 conclusion and a First-class conclusion is this: a 2:2 conclusion restates the essay's main points. A First-class conclusion directly answers the question, states the implications of that answer, and — if appropriate — identifies what further research or analysis would strengthen the argument.
The best conclusions are often the shortest section of the essay. Three to four sentences: here's my answer, here's why it matters, and here's what it doesn't resolve. Done.
The worst conclusions start with "In conclusion, this essay has discussed…" followed by a paragraph that repeats the introduction. If your conclusion could be swapped with your introduction and nobody would notice, it's not doing its job.
The fix: Write your conclusion as a direct answer to the essay question. Literally copy the question at the top of a blank page and write your answer beneath it. If you can't answer the question in two sentences after writing 2,000 words about it, the essay has a structural problem — and SafeGrade's Essay Coach can help you identify where the argument lost direction.
The pattern behind all five myths
Every myth on this list shares the same root cause: students optimise for visible effort instead of analytical quality. More references looks thorough. More words looks complete. A longer introduction looks comprehensive. But markers aren't grading effort — they're grading thinking.
The students who get Firsts are usually the ones who write less, argue more, and edit ruthlessly. That's not talent — it's a learnable skill. And the first step is unlearning the myths that got in the way.
your essay would get?