/
The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction - PowerPoint Presentation

bagony
bagony . @bagony
Follow
344 views
Uploaded On 2020-06-23

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction - PPT Presentation

An essay has three parts Introduction Body Conclusion Section 2 Page 11 11116 Title Essay Structure The 5 Paragraph Essay Introduction Notes An introduction tells readers what your topic is lets them know how you plan to discuss your topic and captures their attention so that t ID: 784744

essay introduction thesis paragraph introduction essay paragraph thesis attention part statement parts topic hook introduce medieval warfare times reader

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download The PPT/PDF document "The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction" is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

An essay has three parts.

Introduction

BodyConclusion

Section 2, Page 11 11-1-16

Title: Essay Structure

Slide2

Slide3

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

Notes

An

introduction tells readers what your topic is, lets them know how you plan to discuss your topic, and captures their attention so that they’ll want to read your composition.

Slide4

Slide5

The

5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

An introduction has three parts.

H – Hook

I – Introduce topic

T – Thesis

Slide6

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

3 Parts to an Introduction

Part 1: Catch the Reader’s Attention (Hook)Capture your reader’s attention and imagination at the earliest opportunity. Use one of these attention-getting techniques in the first few sentences to grab the readers’ attention. be uniqueinteresting factvivid description (scene, object, person, place)thought-provoking question (careful!)quotationCompare and contrastAnalogy (metaphor, simile)shocking statement or statisticanecdote Humor (careful!)

Slide7

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

Introductions:

Set the scene.Put them in the middle of the action.Don’t tell everything.Add dialogue. Introduce a main character.Describing thoughts or emotions.

Slide8

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

3 Parts to an Introduction

Part 1: Catch the Reader’s Attention (Hook)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1-nt5_bRlQ

Slide9

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

3 Parts to an Introduction

Part 2: Introduce topicAfter the hook you should transition into introducing your topic. What, in general, is your paper going to be about? What is the necessary background information? What is the subject?

Slide10

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

3 Parts to an Introduction

Part 3: Thesis StatementYour introduction should always include a thesis statement. The thesis statement is ONE (maybe two) sentence that clearly presents your main idea and your purpose for writing. Subject + claim = thesis statement

Slide11

Slide12

Slide13

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

Part 3: Thesis Statement

DraftRevision I’m going to tell you about how battles were fought in the 1300s.Warfare in medieval times was fairly simple and included unusual strategies.

Slide14

The 5 Paragraph Essay: Introduction

Part 3: Thesis Statement

Have you ever seen a flying horse? Many soldiers in medieval times did. Attackers would sometimes catapult the rotting corpse of a horse over the castle wall in hopes of spreading disease among the enemy. In the heat of battle, any available object would do—rocks, branches, and of course, flaming arrows. Today, warfare is strategically planned and weapons are carefully crafted. Warfare in medieval times, however, was fairly simple and included many unusual strategies.

Slide15

Sample Introduction Paragraph

[Attention-Getter] After the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on New York's World Trade Towers and the Pentagon, the debate surrounding racial profiling in airports intensified. Many people believed that profiling was the best way to identify possible terrorists, but many others worried about violations of civil liberties. While some airports began to target passengers based solely on their Middle Eastern origins, others instituted random searches instead. [Introduce topic] Neither of these techniques seems likely to eliminate terrorism. Now many experts in the government and in airport security are recommending the use of a national ID card or Safe Traveler Card. [Thesis] If every US citizen had such a card, airlines could screen for terrorists more effectively than they do now and avoid procedures that single out individuals solely on the basis of race.