70 likes | 291 Views
Body paragraphs. Essays!. Review characteristics and techniques for writing an Intro: First: Second: Third: What order do you write them in? What is the formula for a good thesis?. Essays. Purpose of the body: How many paragraphs? Organization: Why put these paragraphs in this order?.
E N D
Essays! • Review characteristics and techniques for writing an Intro: • First: • Second: • Third: • What order do you write them in? • What is the formula for a good thesis?
Essays • Purpose of the body: • How many paragraphs? • Organization: Why put these paragraphs in this order?
Essays • A body paragraph: • Topic Sentence—Thesis of the paragraph, supports the thesis of the essay • Evidence (With Lead in/out!) • Evidence (With Lead in/out!) • Evidence (With Lead in/out!) • Concluding sentence (can be related to lead out)
Incorporating evidence • Evidence should be specific • Evidence should prove the topic sentence • Evidence should include explanation of its relevance • Evidence should include a lead in/lead out • Lead in: “For example,” “Smith says in his book,” “For instance,” “As the text says,” etc. • Lead out: Explanation of why this evidence matters to the topic. NEVER ASSUME THE EVIDENCE IS SELF-EXPLANATORY!
Transitions • Internal and External • Tier 1: Signpost words • (First, Second, Next, Last) • Tier 2: Power words and phrases • (However, Therefore, In consequence, In contrast, etc.) • Tier 3: Sentence transitions • (Not only do Narwhals invoke mythic and fantastic imagery, but they also make such characteristics attainable and real.) • Use Tier 1 rarely, Tier 2 internally, and Tier 3 externally
What is theme? • Theme is a main idea or meaning that shows up throughout a piece of literature. • Theme is NOT plot: • Dimmesdale suffers because of his hidden guilt.—NOT theme • Hiding our problems from the world causes us to suffer—Theme • Theme is more than one word: • Guilt—NOT theme (this is a topic) • The way hidden guilt causes us to suffer—Theme