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Chapter Guide

Writing Introductions

The introduction to an essay orients readers to your topic. It is your first opportunity to interest them and to give them the context needed to understand your assertions. There are many introductory strategies; you will see the most common strategies used over and over again.

Writing a Thesis

The thesis is a one-sentence summary of a paper's content. It is an assertion that you wish to make about your essay's topic. You will need to work with your thesis until it fits the parameters of the assignment and allows you to accomplish your purpose in writing the essay. Because you might not know exactly what to assert when you first begin your essay, you should start with a working thesis and refine as you go. As you narrow your thesis, you will also narrow your topic. Keep asking yourself the following questions as you proceed:

You might want to begin with a question. During the writing process, you will probably discover the answer to the question that you posed. The answer to your question should be an assertion about your topic. You can narrow and polish your working thesis by writing different assertions for your topic. Thesis statements can be explanatory, mildly argumentative, or strongly argumentative, depending on your purpose for writing and the scope of the task. Eventually, you will narrow your topic and your thesis to something that is manageable.

Writing Conclusions

The conclusion serves as a bridge from the world of your essay back to the world of your reader. Your conclusion should do the following:

In discussing the significance of your essay, you can use several strategies:

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