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Presented by the UTA English Writing Center
Thesis Statements Presented by the UTA English Writing Center Last Updated 6/16/2016 LT
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Hosted by English Writing Center www.uta.edu/owl
A Program Sponsored by the Department of English
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Writing Center Free Tutoring for Undergrads and Graduate students on all academic projects for UTA classes at any stage of the writing process Face-to-Face Online Individual and Group Projects 20, 40, 60 Minute Sessions 4th Floor of the Central Library Register at uta.mywconline.com Follow us on
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Discussion: What’s Your Thesis?
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What Makes a Good Thesis:
Argumentative: By argumentative, we mean that a thesis should state a claim which can be disputed, rather than simply announcing a topic. For example: Announcement: The thesis of this paper is the difficulty of solving our environmental problems. Thesis: Solving our environmental problems is more difficult than many environmentalists believe. 4th Floor of the Central Library Focused: It should answer the prompt and be narrow enough to discuss and prove within the assigned length.
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What Makes a Good Thesis:
Controversial: This doesn’t mean a thesis should address a hot-button issue, but that a reasonable person could argue an alternative (or opposite) position. For example: Not controversial: Romeo and Juliet is a play about young lovers struggling against their families. More controversial: While it is true that Romeo and Juliet is a play about young lovers, the most complex relationships are those between the young characters and their older mentors. Supportable: The demand that a thesis be controversial does not mean that it should be ridiculous or indefensible. A thesis will clearly require evidence to prove—and will often make it clear what kind of evidence will be required.
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What Makes a Good Thesis:
Significant: It should explain why it is worth arguing for. Directed: a good thesis will often hint at (or say explicitly) how the argument will be proven. As such it is a condensed argument. For example: BEFORE: World War II led to the modernization of industrial facilities in Japan AFTER: World War II led to the modernization of industrial facilities in Japan, by doing X, Y, and Z.
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Discussion: Writing a Thesis
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Writing a Thesis Statement:
Articulates a contribution to an academic conversation.
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Generating a Thesis Current/Past Conversation: New Contribution:
a commonly held assumption in a field or a persuasive position argued by one or more experts New Contribution: What the writer is adding to the conversation Importance: What are its broader implications? How does it offer a new and important outlook?
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Entering Academic Conversations:
Disagreeing, with reasons: I think X is mistaken because she overlooks _______. X’s claim that _______ rests upon the questionable assumption that _______. I disagree with X’s view that _______ because, as recent research has shown, _______. Taken from Graff & Birkenstein, TS/IS
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Entering Academic Conversations:
Introducing “standard views” Americans today tend to believe that _______. The standard way of thinking about topic X has it that _______. Many people assume that _______. Taken from Graff & Birkenstein, TS/IS
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Field specific commonplaces or assumptions? Major questions?
Brainstorming: Field specific commonplaces or assumptions? Major questions?
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In this paper I will argue that ___________________________ because/by
Working Thesis In this paper I will argue that ___________________________ because/by _________.
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Weak Theses Revision Strategies www.uta.edu/owl
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What did you prioritize?
Revision Strategies What did you prioritize?
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2Qs Question 1: What is the most important thing you’ve learned about writing today? Question 2: What questions or concerns do you still have regarding writing?
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