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The Structure of an Essay

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Presentation on theme: "The Structure of an Essay"— Presentation transcript:

1 The Structure of an Essay
Another Boring PPT by Jessica Wojtysiak Bakersfield College – B80

2 General Structure of an Essay
Introduction Attention Getter Thesis Statement Body Paragraphs Main idea sentence Evidence Explanation of the evidence Conclusion Restatement of thesis Call to action, general statement of belief

3 Introduction First Paragraph of the Essay
Begins broad, gradually narrows Ends with the thesis statement Rarely includes quotations; should not begin to argue the thesis

4 Basicly… “Tell ‘em what you are going to tell ‘em“ “Tell ‘em”
“Tell ‘em what you told ‘em”

5 Attention Getter Gives a reader a reason to keep reading
Begin general, move to the specific thesis Avoid questions

6 Thesis Statement Explains the focus of your paper
Leaves room for disagreement Answers the question: What is your argument?

7 What Your Thesis Does… The thesis sentence must control the entire argument. Your thesis sentence determines what you are required to write in a paper. It also determines what you cannot write. Every paragraph in your paper exists in order to support your thesis. Accordingly, if one of your paragraphs seems irrelevant to your thesis you have two choices: get rid of the paragraph, or rewrite your thesis.

8 Thesis Where? Last sentence in the first paragraph
First sentence in the last paragraph

9 Consider Your Prompt In the early chapters of Enrique’s Journey, you learned about Enrique’s life and decision to follow his mother to the United States. Did Enrique make the right decision? Use what you have read to either defend or reject Enrique’s choice. In other words, you may write a paper in which you argue that Enrique was right to leave Honduras or that he should have stayed at home.

10 Crafting a Thesis What does the prompt require the writer to do?
What questions require an answer?

11 Thesis Statement Topic Claim Support Qualification

12 Topic = What do you have an opinion about?
The Topic is the General Subject of your Paper = What do you have an opinion about? = Ex. Illegal immigration—fairly simple = The detriment of illegal immigration upon the family unit – more narrow

13 Claim = What is one thing about your topic that you believe to be true and that you wish to argue? = The detriment of illegal immigration upon young children born outside of the United States should discouraged due to --must be addressed through --can be prevented/minimized by -- In order to reduce … (use at beginning)

14 The Support = In general why do you believe your position to be correct in spite of any opposing arguments? = This is a general statement; your specific reasons will follow in the body of your essay. Enrique was right because… Children like Enrique should not try to travel to the United States because…

15 The Qualification A good thesis is always arguable – that means you are going to have people who disagree with you To state your thesis like it is an absolute will weaken your case and lose credibility with the reader = Here’s a trick: begin your qualification with a word like “although,” “despite,” “though,” or “even though.”

16 Example with Qualification
Although Enrique may have believed that he was making the right choice, he should have stayed in his home country because the journey north is too dangerous.

17 Working Thesis in Action
1st draft Enrique was wrong! 2nd draft Enrique was wrong because the trip north is too dangerous. 3rd draft While Enrique loved and missed his mother, he should have remained in Honduras to complete his education and avoid the dangers of the trip.

18 So What? = a good thesis statement should take a stand
= a good thesis statement should justify discussion = a good thesis statement should express one main idea or a clear relationship between specific ideas linked by words like "because," "since," "so," "although," "unless," or "however.”

19 Thesis Checklist Is your thesis statement 1-2 declarative sentences?
Does your thesis statement state what you want your readers to know, believe, or understand after reading your essay? Does your thesis statement reflect everything in the essay? Does your essay develop everything in the thesis statement? Is your thesis statement clear and unambiguous? Is your thesis statement precise and limited? Is your thesis statement defensible?

20 Body Paragraphs Support the Thesis Contain arguments/evidence
Begin with paragraph #2, end with the 2nd to last paragraph

21 Basic Outline of a Body Paragraph
Topic Sentence Evidence or reasoning Explanation

22 Topic Sentences Control the entire paragraph.
Every sentence in a paragraph exists to support the topic sentence.

23 Writing Topic Sentences
To write the topic sentence, ask yourself what sentence is broad enough to describe all of the sentences in the paragraph. Topic sentences are broad. Supporting details are more specific but all share a common link to the topic sentence.

24 Revising Topic Sentences
If a sentence does not support the topic sentence, something is wrong. Options: Remove the sentence from the paragraph Rewrite the topic sentence to incorporate the sentence

25 Where do they go? Most often the first sentence of the paragraph.
The author starts with a broad idea and then offers specific examples or evidence to support that broad idea. The reader knows exactly what the paragraph will be about just by reading the first sentence.

26 But… Topic sentences can be the last sentence of a paragraph.
They can be in the middle of a paragraph. A paragraph can contain 2 topic sentences. A paragraph may even be missing a topic sentence. (Don’t do this!)

27 Ultimately… You can treat the topic sentence of body paragraphs like the thesis statement of the essay Topic sentences control the content of the body paragraph

28 Conclusion Restate the Thesis Summarize the Essay
Leave the Reader with something to think about

29 Essay Structure Checklist
Do I have at least 3 paragraphs (intro/body/conclusion)? Do I have a clearly articulated thesis? Is the thesis the last sentence in the first paragraph? Does each body paragraph have a main idea/topic sentence? Where is the topic sentence? Does each body paragraph support the thesis? Is each body paragraph supported by evidence and/or logic? Does the conclusion restate the thesis in the first sentence? Does the conclusion avoid making new arguments?


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