Why the answer is B, and why the others tempt you.
**The reasoning**
The GRE (Graduate Record Examination) is a formal academic test, and like all standardized essays—including your JAMB, WAEC, or Post-UTME essays—it demands a **traditional academic structure**: introduction, body paragraphs, and conclusion.
Here's why: The introduction sets up your thesis (your main argument). The body paragraphs develop that argument with evidence and examples. The conclusion reinforces your point. This structure shows examiners you can organize complex ideas logically—exactly what graduate schools want to see.
Think of it like building a house: foundation (intro), rooms (body), roof (conclusion). You can't just have rooms floating around!
**Why the wrong options tempt you**
**A (Single paragraph)** — Too informal and cramped. You can't develop nuanced arguments in one block.
**C & D (Lists)** — These might work for brainstorming notes, but they're not *essays*. Essays require full sentences, transitions, and flow—not choppy points.
**Quick takeaway**
**Any formal essay exam—GRE, JAMB, WAEC—always wants intro/body/conclusion.** It's the universal language of academic writing. Master this structure, and you'll score well anywhere.
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