Personally I have few scruples when it comes to essay-writing. However, I can't help but think that any writers who believe their essays aren't ending up on the prof's desk are deluding themselves. In my opinion, I can't imagine students who cheat ever getting to a point where they find themselves in a career that puts a person's health or safety at risk. Bridges aren't going to collapse because a student handed in an essay I wrote. Surgeries aren't going to go terribly awry because of my interpretation of Vanity Fair. I think the best (or worst) case scenario here is that a student might undeservingly make it to an interview s/he's not qualified for based on academic merit, in which case s/he would get weeded out pretty quickly. I hire summer grads each year for my job, and I've come to realize that 90% of students who look good on paper are staggeringly stupid during the interview.
You definitely get better with practice: most new writers specialize in longer deadlines and work much the way they did as students, laboring for several days over every 10-pg paper.
I'm glad to hear this. Part of the reason I'm intrigued in essay writing is because I imagine it'll augment my own writing skills and critical thinking. Plus, I'm just generally interested in nearly everything. I think it would be kind of fun to spend some time each week learning about subjects completely unrelated to my career & hobbies.
I'm strictly interested in this as a way of making extra money; I like my current job and meet all my savings goals, but it would be amazing if I could make an extra $5k/year on the side for my various superfluous interests. Keeping that in mind, would you recommend I try to freelance on my own, or first sign up for one of the more legitimate writing companies? Also I'd like to try and keep myself as insular and anonymous as possible at first - do any companies allow you to sign up without providing loads of personal documentation? Ideally I'd like to give out an email address, paypal information, and a pseudonym.
The only objective "qualifications" you can provide are that you have a particular degree, but having a degree in most academic fields has little to do with how well you write, especially if you're writing in many more subject areas than your formal educational background.
I agree with this. In addition to degrees, I was thinking I could provide my GRE verbal scores; however this is also easily photoshopped and only really attests to my ability to correctly interpret difficult vocabulary based on context.
Thanks again for all the advice.