This advanced essay generator helps you create well-researched, accurate essays using trusted sources, all formatted perfectly in MLA style. Whether you’re working on an academic assignment or creating content, it ensures your work is precise and follows proper citation rules. Plus, it’s built on a clear and logical outline from San José State University, so each essay has a strong introduction, body, and conclusion to guide your ideas.
With this tool, you don’t have to worry about citations or structure—it’s all taken care of! You can focus on your writing, knowing the flow will deliver a polished, MLA-formatted essay every time.
This Flow uses two Agents:
- A research writer with good writing skill. that writes the article with the specified criteria.
- A rewriter that makes sentences complex, more fluid, and better.
Try the Flow
The Prompt:
“use the users input to generate an essay that is formatted in this way:
—————————————————————–
I. Introduction
A. Hook/ Attention Grabber
1. Provide a sentence that will catch the reader’s interest.
2. Try not to make a broad/generalized statement.
3. Offer something concise and catchy.
B. Background Information
1. Provide general background information.
2. Offer some more specific background information (as needed).
3. Provide the title of the piece and the author’s name if the essay is about a
specific book/poem/article/passage.
C. Thesis Statement
1. State your topic and position. Remember that a thesis = claim + reasons.
2. Outline your main points and ideas.
II. Body
A. Paragraph 1 (first main point)
1. Topic sentence: what is this paragraph about?
2. Supporting evidence and ideas
a) Give reasons, facts, proof, statistics, quotes (with citations).
b) Analyze your supporting evidence.
(1) Why does your evidence matter? What does it mean?
(2) Transition to the next point.
3. Summarize and transition to your next main idea.
B. Paragraph 2 (second main point)
1. Topic sentence: what is this paragraph about?
2. Supporting evidence and ideas
a) Give reasons, facts, proof, statistics, quotes (with citations).
Essay Outline Template, Fall 2020. 2 of 2
b) Analyze your supporting evidence.
(1) Why does your evidence matter? What does it mean?
(2) Transition to the next point.
3. Summarize and transition to your next main idea.
C. Possible Paragraph 3 (third main point)
1. Topic sentence: what is this paragraph about?
2. Supporting evidence and ideas
a) Give reasons, facts, proof, statistics, quotes (with citations).
b) Analyze your supporting evidence.
(1) Why does your evidence matter? What does it mean?
(2) Transition to the next point.
3. Summarize and transition to your next main idea or conclusion.
D. Possible Paragraph 4 (fourth main point)
1. Topic sentence: what is this paragraph about?
2. Supporting evidence and ideas
a) Give reasons, facts, proof, statistics, quotes (with citations).
b) Analyze your supporting evidence.
(1) Why does your evidence matter? What does it mean?
(2) Transition to the next point.
c) Provide more reasons/facts/evidence/etc. (with citations).
d) Analyze your supporting evidence.
(1) Why does your evidence matter? What does it mean?
(2) Transition to the concluding sentence.
3. Summarize and transition to your conclusion.
[NOTE: Continue with as many body paragraphs as necessary to develop your topic fully.
Remember to include only one main point per paragraph. If you’re moving to a new main point,
create a new paragraph.]
III. Conclusion
A. Summarize key points and pull it all together.
1. Don’t introduce new information/ evidence.
2. Don’t repeat your writing verbatim from previous parts of the paper.
B. Offer closing thoughts and give the reader something to think about.
1. Suggest a call-to-action.
2. Provide a look into the future related to your topic.
IV. References in MLA format
**don’t include any of these instructions in the text itself**
—————————————————-
the input should be formatted like: topic/word count if it is not make sure to ask the user to insert correct format.
—CONTEXT START—
{context}
—
—INPUT START—
{input}
—
respect the word count specified by the user.
BLOG:”
Components breakdown
Chat Input: This is the message you send in the chat. It’s the starting point of any flow.
URL Retriever: Allows your Flow to retrieve information from individual URLs.
GoogleSearch(x2): Searches the web for results relevant to the user query.
Prompt: Passes detailed instructions, roles, and behaviors to the AI.
AI Agent (x2): An agent is an autonomous AI that uses its own reasoning to perform tasks.
Sequential Task (x2): Assigns tasks to AI Agents and controls the order in which tasks are performed.
Sequential Crew: Brings the AI Agents and Tasks together.
Chat Output: Component representing the chatbot’s answer.
Useful Tips
There are several ways you can adjust and improve this flow:
- Adjust the Agent’s Goals, Backstory, and Role to reflect your needs.
- Adjust the Task Description and Expected Output to reflect your exact needs.
- Use an LLM component to switch to a different LLM model.
- Try enhancing the output by adding another Agent with a new task.
- Connect Chat History to let previous messages give context to later answers.