Introductions and Conclusions

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Effective Conclusion Techniques
Advertisements

How to Write a Good Conclusion
Introductory & Conclusion Paragraphs. How should we organize our ideas? c Introduction Conclusion Body Paragraphs.
Response to Literature Essay Writing. Directions Copy everything that is underlined on page 2R.
Introductory & Conclusion Paragraphs. How should we organize our ideas? c Introduction Conclusion Body Paragraphs.
ENG 102 POWERPOINT PRESENTATIONS Directions: Click the left mouse button to move through this PowerPoint presentation. Often you will need to click the.
The “How and Why” of Writing
Response to Literature Essay Writing. Intro. Paragraph with thesis statement* Body Par. #1 Body Par. #2 Body Par. #3 (optional) Concluding Paragraph.
Revisiting the 5-Paragraph Essay
The Writing Process Introduction Prewriting Writing Revising
Main Idea Topic Sentence Supporting Details
Digging Through Essay Layers By Aigiun Guseinova.
Response to Literature Essay Writing. Intro. Paragraph with thesis statement* Body Par. #1 Body Par. #2 Body Par. #3 (optional) Concluding Paragraph.
Writing an Introduction & Conclusion. Introduction The introduction is the most important paragraph in the essay. Its purpose is to get the attention.
Response to Literature Essay Writing. Intro. Paragraph with thesis statement* Body Par. #1 Body Par. #2 Body Par. #3 Concluding Paragraph.
Writing Conclusions.
Introductions and Conclusions English –Mrs. Rice.
Introductions and Conclusions. Attention-getting openings  A startling fact or bit of information  A meaningful quotation  A universal idea related.
Introductions and Conclusions. Introductions Do begin your paper with: ◦A quotation ◦A surprising statement ◦A question ◦An anecdote ◦A definition Do.
Introductions and Conclusions. Save the first for last Save the first for last  Have at least a working version of major thesis before drafting but save.
Introductions & Conclusions
Advanced English Writing
The Elements of an Excellent Essay Some reminders for you as you begin composing your persuasive essay.
What does the conclusion do? 1. it summarizes the essay 2. it shows you proved the point you set out to make 3. it gives the reader a sense of completion.
Titles and Introductions Titles and introductions are the FIRST thing the reader sees and so they are often the one thing that determines whether your.
Introductory & Conclusion Paragraphs. How should we organize our ideas? c Introduction Conclusion Body Paragraphs.
5 Paragraph Persuasive Essay Including a counter-argument.
Purpose of Informative/Expository Writing  Explains  Describes  Illustrates  Defines  Informs.
Purpose of Expository Writing  Explains  Describes  Illustrates  Defines  Informs.
Expository Essays Intended to explain, inform, illustrate, or define.
Brad Case English 9. The standard five paragraph essay structure follows a specific format. The introduction has a thesis and introduces three main supporting.
January  It SHOULD stress the importance of the thesis statement.  It SHOULD give the essay a sense of completeness.  It SHOULD identify the.
Informative Essay Outline Paragraph # 1 Introduction Paragraph # 2 Main idea/body 1 Paragraph # 3 Main idea/body 2 Paragraph # 4 Main idea/body 3 Paragraph.
WRITING CONCLUSIONS By: Wendy Aguiar. What is a conclusion? ◦ A conclusion is what you will leave with your reader ◦ It "wraps up" your essay ◦ It demonstrates.
5-Paragraph Essay Structure
Introductions & Conclusions Where to Start?. The Introduction.
Warm-up #7 1.What do you need for Friday? 2.Pick out one of the arguments below, find the counterargument and refute it. 1.Four day school weeks will keep.
Introductions and Conclusions Writing the Essay ENG 10.
Introductory & Conclusion Paragraphs
Compare/Contrast Essay Conclusion. The Effective Conclusion Restate thesis in topic sentence Develop statements logically from paper Summarize main points.
The Research Paper: Introductions
Writing Notes This information will be on the final examination in June.
Paragraph #1-Introduction
Response to Literature Literature naturally stirs up thoughts and feelings. One way to explore those thoughts is to write a response to literature.
A Guide to he Literary-Analysis Essay Writing Terms Defined.
Introductions, Conclusions, and Works Cited- a how to guide.
Introductions and Conclusions. Save the first for last Save the first for last  Have at least a working version of major thesis before drafting but save.
Response to Literature Essay Writing. Intro. Paragraph with thesis statement* I. 1 st Main Idea II. 2 nd Main Idea III. 3 rd Main Idea Concluding Paragraph.
Response to Literature Essay Writing
Response to Literature Essay Writing
POWERPOINT PRESENTATIONS
Today: Monday, May 8th Independent Reading- 15 minutes Literary Essay-Lesson & Notes Brainstorming English 10.
Writing a Great Conclusion (from Literacy Education Online, 2004)
How to Write a Concluding Paragraph
Conclusions.
Strategies for Writing a Conclusion
1. Hook Introductions Integrated Quote
Response to Literature Essay Writing
How to Write Concluding Paragraphs
Introduction and Conclusion Paragraphs
Synthesis Essay.
Conclusions.
Response to Literature Essay Writing
Response to Literature Essay Writing HS 9-12 TLC Academy
INTRODUCTIONS The introduction to an ACT essay has to do these things:
Response to Literature Essay Writing
Writing Your Conclusion
Strategies for Writing a Conclusion
Writing Conclusions ENC 1101.
Pick 5 terms to Define..
Presentation transcript:

Introductions and Conclusions The Buns for the Burger

Building a Better Burger, One Paper at a time! Now that the “meat” of your paper is ready, you want to ensure that the “bun” is just good! The “bun” needs special attention because it represents the way in which you introduce and finalize your work.

Save the first for last Have at least a working version of major thesis before drafting but save the introduction for later. Then it will truly introduce what’s written instead of what writer intended. This ties the introduction more effectively to the conclusion by writing them both at the same time.

Effective introductions “can stop traffic”

Attention-getting openings A startling fact or bit of information A meaningful quotation A universal idea related to your thesis A rich, vivid description or image A fresh analogy or metaphor An interesting anecdote, story, or dramatic episode A thought-provoking question Beginning in the middle of the action

Openings to avoid Dictionary definitions of words your reader should know. “Did you know?” or “Have you ever wondered?” rhetorical questions “This paper will be about …” “In this paper I will prove”

More opening mistakes to avoid Beginning too far away from your actual topic (“There are many novels, all of which have characters. Some characters are heroes, and some are not.”) A “book report” list of irrelevant facts (William Shakespeare lived in the Elizabethan era in England. He wrote many plays. One of these plays was Hamlet.)

Hint about openings When previewing main topics in your introduction, make sure you list them in the order in which they appear in your paper.

What goes in the introduction Essential background about your topic and preparation for your major thesis. This includes your text(s)and author(s) used. Road maps for the rest of the essay, previewing major ideas and posing important questions that you will consider in your paper. Introduction ends with your major thesis. Make special attempts to link the TS to the sentence that precedes it by building on a key word or idea.

The conclusion Your conclusion wraps up your argument and leaves the reader with some final things to think about. Your conclusion should stem from what you have already written. Effective conclusions therefore often refer back to ideas presented in a paper’s introduction.

Purpose of the conclusion Should echo the major thesis without repeating words verbatim. Should move beyond TS to reflect on significance of ideas just presented. Should indicate why these ideas are important.

Effective conclusions Answer the Question “So what?” Show your readers why this paper was important. Show them that your paper was meaningful and useful. Synthesize, don’t summarize: Don’t simply repeat things that were in your paper. They have read it. Show them how the points you made and the support and examples you used fit together. Redirect your readers: Show how the topics and support work in the “real” world. If your intro went from general to specific, make your conclusion go from specific to general. Think globally. Issue a call for action on the part of the audience (in true persuasive writings like letters to editor) This challenges the readers to apply the info to their own lives.

How to create effective conclusions Ask questions generated by essay’s findings Make predictions Recommend a solution Give a personal statement about the topic Connect back to introduction, esp. if writer used a metaphor, anecdote, or vivid image End with a creative yet relevant metaphor

Conclusions to avoid: Beginning with “In conclusion …” Restating thesis and main points without adding anything new Bringing up a new topic Adding irrelevant details (esp. just to make a paper longer)