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Introductions & Conclusions. Where to Start?. The Introduction. Essentially 3 Parts. 1) Hook 2) Elaborate on hook and link to thesis/larger body of essay 3) Thesis statement. Get the Reader’s Attention!. Relate a dramatic anecdote. Expose a commonly held belief.
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Introductions & Conclusions Where to Start?
Essentially 3 Parts • 1) Hook • 2) Elaborate on hook and link to thesis/larger body of essay • 3) Thesis statement
Get the Reader’s Attention! • Relate a dramatic anecdote. • Expose a commonly held belief. • Present surprising facts and statistics. • Use a fitting quotation. • Ask a provocative question. • Tell a vivid personal story. • Define a key term. • Present an interesting observation. • Create a unique scenario.
The Background Information… • Provide a “bridge” from your introductory statement (called a “hook”) to your thesis statement. • Elaborate on your opening statement to provide context for the reader while linking it to the overall ideas you will be addressing in your essay.
Thesis Statement • Should be one detailed sentence in length • Tells the reader what the entire essay is going to be about
A conclusion should… • Stress the importance of the thesis statement (which essentially re-states the sum of your essay) • Give the essay a sense of completeness • Leave a final impression on the reader
DO re-state; DO NOT repeat • Re-state your thesis statement, but don’t use the exact same wording. DO NOT copy and paste your thesis from your introduction into your conclusion! Your reader has already read your paper and doesn’t need a repeat!
CONSIDER… • Answer the question, “So what?” and show your readers why your paper is important. • Synthesize; don’t summarize. Don’t simply repeat what you’ve already written about. • Redirect your readers. Give your reader something to think about. • Create a new meaning for your reader by showing how your ideas work together. • REMEMBER: This is your last chance to make an impression on your reader! Don’t waste that opportunity!
Sources Cited…Getting the Reader’s Attention ideas taken from http://www.cdtl.nus.edu.sg/success/sl25.htm.Some Conclusion information taken from http://leo.stcloudstate.edu/acadwrite/conclude.html.
Writing Introductions… • -Read your prompt. • -Brainstorm first as a group. THEN • Write an attention-getter. • Link to the context of the rest of your paper. • Write your thesis statement with three main points.
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