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How to Write a Thesis Statement. Guidelines for the Thesis Challenged. Best if viewed in Slide Show View. The Map. A thesis statement (TS) is a guide map to your entire paper. It provides a mini-summary of the paper’s content.
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How to Write a Thesis Statement Guidelines for the Thesis Challenged Best if viewed in Slide Show View
The Map • A thesis statement (TS) is a guide map to your entire paper. • It provides a mini-summary of the paper’s content. • It allows the reader to know in advance how the paper is organized. • It lets the reader know why he/she should care. (The “So What?”)
Express Yourself • The thesis statement expresses the main ideas of your paper and previews the answer to the question or questions posed by your paper.
What Can A TS Do For You? • Helps you start drafting. • Helps keep you focused. • Helps to narrow your subject to a single, central idea. • Serves as a point of reference if changes occur.
Topic Assertion Two Main Parts • A Thesis Statement generally consists of two main parts • Your topic, and then the analysis, explanation, or assertion, that you’re making about the topic.
Topic Analysis Explanation Assertion Two Main Parts Part 1 Part 2
To Do List • Make a concise assertion about your topic. • Limit the statement to only one idea. • Make the assertion specific and significant.
To Do List • At least imply your purpose. • Unify the statement so that the parts relate to each other.
A Thesis Statement Gone Wrong This new product brought in over $30,000 last year. • This is a statement of fact without an assertion. • What’s the significance of the product’s success? (The “So What?”)
A Thesis Statement Gone Wrong • Before: This new product brought in over $30,000 last year. • After: This product succeeded because of its innovative marketing campaign, including widespread press coverage, in-store entertainment, and a consumer newsletter.
General Examples • Show that essay’s purpose is to explain. • Show essay’s organization. • Show that essay’s purpose is to persuade.
Purpose to Explain • The following examples of thesis statements announce that the essays’ purposes are mainly to explain about their subjects.
Pecking Order in an Office • Two months working in a large government agency taught me that an office’s pecking order should be respected. Assertion: Should be respected Topic: Office’s pecking order
Web Distribution of Music • Because artists can now publish their music directly via the Web, consumers have many more choices than traditional distribution allows. Assertion: Have many more choices Topic: Consumers
What Public Relations Does • Although most of us are unaware of the public relations campaigns directed at us, they can significantly affect the way we think and live. Assertion: Affect the way we think and live Topic: Public relations campaigns
Organization • The following example on preventing juvenile crime clearly predicts the organization of the essay.
Preventing Juvenile Crime • Juveniles can be diverted from crime by active learning programs, full-time sports, and intervention by mentors and role models. Assertion: Can be diverted from crime in three ways Topic: Juveniles
Persuasion • The following example on federal aid to college students announces that the essay’s main purpose is to convince the reader of something.
Federal Aid to College Students • To compete well in the global economy, the United States must make higher education affordable for any student who qualifies academically. Assertion: Must be made available to any qualified student in the U.S. Topic: Affordable education
Checklist Questions • Does the statement make a concise assertion about your topic? • Is the assertion limited to only one idea? • Is the assertion specific and significant?
Checklist Questions • Does the statement at least imply your purpose? • Is the statement unified so that the parts relate to each other?
Three Specific Types of Thesis Statements • Analytical • Expository (Explanatory) • Argumentative
Three Specific Types of Thesis Statements • Analytical • Compare/Contrast essays
Analysis Essay • In an analytical paper, you are breaking down an issue or an idea into its component parts, evaluating the issue or idea, and presenting this breakdown and evaluation to your reader.
Analysis Essay • An analytical thesis statement will explain: • What you are analyzing. • The parts of your analysis. • The order in which you will be presenting your analysis.
Analysis Questions • What did I analyze? • What did I discover in my analysis? • How can I categorize my discoveries? • In what order should I present my discoveries?
Analysis-Example • An analysis of barn owl flight behavior reveals two kinds of flight patterns: patterns related to hunting prey and patterns related to courtship.
Analysis-Example • A reader could expect that the paper will provide an explanation of the analysis of barn owl flight behavior, and then an explanation of the two kinds of flight patterns.
Three Specific Types of Thesis Statements • Expository (Explanatory) • Illustrative essays • Explicative essays • Descriptive essays
Explanation Essay • In an expository paper, you are explaining something to your reader.
Explanation Essay • An expository (explanatory) thesis statement will tell your audience: • What you are going to explain to them. • The categories your are using to organize your explanation. • The order in which you will be presenting your categories.
Explanation Questions • What am I trying to explain? • How can I categorize my explanation into different parts? • In what order should I present the different parts of my explanation?
Explanation-Example • The lifestyles of barn owls include hunting for insects and animals, building nests, and raising their young.
Explanation-Example • A reader could expect that the paper will explain how owls hunt for insects and animals, build nests, and raise their young.
Three Specific Types of Thesis Statements • Argumentative • Persuasive essays • Argumentative essays • Cause/Effect essays
Argumentation Essay • In an argumentative paper, you are making a claim about a topic and justifying this claim with reasons and evidence.
Argumentation Essay • This claim could be an opinion, a policy proposal, an evaluation, a cause-and-effect statement, or an interpretation.
Argumentation Essay • This claim must be one that someone could possibly disagree with because the goal of the paper is to convince the reader that your claim is true based on your presentation of your reasons and evidence.
Argumentation Questions • What is my claim or assertion? • What are the reasons I have to support my claim or assertion? • In what order should I present my reasons?
Argumentation—Example • Barn owls’ nests should not be eliminated from barns because barn owls help farmers by eliminating insect and rodent pests.
Argumentation—Example • A reader could expect that the paper will present an argument and evidence that farmers should not get rid of barn owls when they find them nesting in their barns.
Checklist Questions • Does the statement make a concise assertion about your topic? • Is the assertion limited to only one idea? • Is the assertion specific and significant?
Checklist Questions • Does the statement at least imply your purpose? • Is the statement unified so that the parts relate to each other?
Works Cited • Most of the information provided in these slides was plucked (either word-for-word or paraphrased) from Purdue University’s Online Writing Lab. • Visit the website for more information: • http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/print