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Reviewing The Basic Parts of an Essay Reviewing The Basic Parts of an Essay

Reviewing The Basic Parts of an Essay - PowerPoint Presentation

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Reviewing The Basic Parts of an Essay - PPT Presentation

First Paragraph Introduction The purpose of an introduction is to set your reader up for the rest of the essay Catch your readers attention and get them interested in the topic Give the some BREIF background on the topic if they need it to understand your main idea ID: 737943

essay topic paragraph support topic essay support paragraph main idea thesis sentence cell ideas examples specific reviews people phones

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Slide1

Reviewing The Basic Parts of an Essay

First Paragraph: Introduction

The purpose of an introduction is to set your reader up for the rest of the essay:

Catch your reader’s attention, and get them interested in the topic.

Give the some BREIF background on the topic if they need it to understand your main idea.

Give them your main idea (thesis) that you will be expanding on and supporting in the rest of the essay.

Your Thesis for this essay needs to make a

clear

statement about

you’re experience as it is connected to reading, writing, and identity. Slide2

Body Paragraphs

This is the main part of your essay.

This is where you expand on your topic and support you thesis with vivid description, background and explanations, outside support, and logic.

Remember the Rhetorical Triangle: Ethos, Pathos, and Logos. What might these three things look like in

this

Essay

?

Organize your body paragraphs so that each body paragraph has a main point that connects to the main point (thesis) of your entire essay.

Make sure that the paragraphs are organized in a logical manner. Remember: you can move your paragraphs around! Slide3

Last Paragraph: Conclusion

The purpose of a conclusion is to conclude your essay in a way that lets your reader understand in a BREIF FORM what they have just read.

Imagine it this way: You

have just taken your reader on a journey in your essay. The purpose of the intro is to give your reader a mental "map" or preview of where you are going to take them.

The

purpose of the

conclusion

is to show them where they have been, yes, but also

to emphasize

the basic essential points you want them to walk away with. What do you really want them to

remember and think about

AFTER they are finished

reading?

Why does it matter? THAT

is the purpose of a conclusion.Slide4

Work Cited page:

Is required and NOT OPTIONAL

whenever

you do ANY outside research or get any information from anyone other than yourself.

Needs to be correctly formatted in MLA style.

If we need to review MLA

style

futher

,

we can do that, just let me know.

Keep in mind that your textbook has a very helpful and detailed guide on how to do this. You don’t really have an excuse for not looking it up yourself. Slide5

Organizing Paragraphs:

The Topic Sentence

Your topic sentence introduces the

main idea

of your paragraph.

A topic sentence has two parts: a

topic

an a

controlling idea.

Your

topic

is what the paragraph is about.

Your

controlling idea

is the opinion or idea

about

the topic that the paragraph will explain. Slide6

Example Topic Sentences

Let’

s say that you were assigned to write a paragraph about the topic “Cell phones”.

There are many different ideas or opinions about cell phones that you could explore, so it

s important to pick

just one.

You might write…

Cell phones that can connect to the internet

have changed the way people shop.

Cell phones and texting

should be banned during class time.Slide7

Supporting Your Topic Sentence

When you have decided what your topic and your controlling idea will be, it is time to support your topic sentence.

Primary support

points are the major ideas that support your topic sentence. (They are usually general rather than specific.)

Secondary support

points are specific examples and details that back up your primary support. Slide8

Example Paragraph Outline

Topic Sentence:

Cell phones that can connect to the internet have changed the way people shop.

Primary support 1: Able to check reviews online.

Secondary support: Checked reviews for digital camera at Best Buy.

Secondary support: Check reviews of new authors at amazon.com before buying at a bookstore

Primary support 2: Able to compare prices at other stores while shopping.

Compared prices on the new season of

Burn Notice

the first day it was out.

Compared prices for new flash drive when I lost my old one.

Primary support 3: Able to use coupons without ever printing them out.

Used a 40% off coupon scanned off of my

iPhone at World Market last week.

Used an emailed coupon at a candle store last month. Slide9

Completed Paragraph

Cell phones that can connect to the internet have changed the way people shop.

First

of all, customers can immediately check reviews online before making a decision.

When I was shopping for a digital camera at Best Buy, I used an iPhone to see which brand had the most positive reviews. Also, when I buy a book by a new author at the bookstore, I sometimes check reviews of his or her books at amazon.com first.

Second,

customers can compare prices at other stores while they are out shopping.

When the new Sherlock Holmes movie came out, I compared prices online and was surprised to find that Target had a better price than some online discount stores. I also compared prices using a cell phone when I lost my flash drive and had to buy a new one.

Finally,

customers are able to use in-store coupons without ever printing them out, which saves a lot of money, paper, and ink.

Last week, I used a 40% off coupon scanned off of my room mate

s iPhone at Borders, and last month, I used a coupon that had been emailed to me at a candle store.

In these ways, cell phones are making it easier for customers to find the best deals and make informed decisions. Slide10

Parallel: Structure of a Paragraph/Structure of an Essay

Introduction:

Main Thesis of the Essay

Paragraph 1

:

Topic Sentence—supporting main thesis

Support/Evidence/Examples

Paragraph

2:

Topic Sentence—supporting main thesis

Support/Evidence/Examples

Paragraph

3:

Topic Sentence—supporting main thesis

Support/Evidence/Examples

Paragraph

4 and more:

Topic Sentence—supporting main thesis

Support/Evidence/Examples

Conclusion:

Reemphasize thesis

and summarize contribution to the greater conversation on the topic/call to action or further thought. Slide11

Using Specific Details

Wherever possible in your essay, use specific details instead of general ones.

Refer to people who are important to the narrative by their names whenever possible.

Refer to specific numbers, times, and places.

Add facts and explanation to statements that might mean different things to different readers.

Use examples to explain.

Remember, you are drawing from

your

experience. Make it

unique

to you.Slide12

Examples of Specific Details

Not specific at all: “I eat some things some people I know consider weird.”

“Things” is a very vague word. The same thing goes for “stuff” and “some.”

How could this sentence be improved? Slide13

Improved Sentence:

Original Sentence: “I eat some things some people I know consider weird.”

Improved: “I eat Sushi, Indian food, or Thai food at least once or twice a month, and some of my older relatives find this strange. My dad’s parents are both from the Midwest where the staples of a good dinner are steak and corn on the cob, and they are confused by the fact that their granddaughter loves raw fish, spicy curry, and odd looking clear noodles.Slide14

Importance of TransitionsMany

narratives

are organized

chronologically.

You do not have to organize chronologically. Some narratives are organized from most to least significant event, or in some other way.

However you choose to arrange the details and events in your essay, you will need

transitions

to guide your reader from one idea to the next.

Transitions tell your reader how each new section or detail connects with what came before.

Transitions help your readers to understand the order of events.

UCSB’s website has some good advice on paragraph transitions

http://www.writing.ucsb.edu/faculty/donelan/para.htmlSlide15

Essays: Before You Write, Think!

Step back and look at the reading and writing you have done so far, and think about how you might expand and develop these ideas into an essay.

Analyze

the ideas you are working with in connection with these questions: What are the

larger implications

of the idea? How do these ideas connect to society—our beliefs, our behaviors, our problems?

How

might another text (written or visual) that you have read or viewed in this course or elsewhere shape the way you think about the idea? How does your own experience influence your thinking? Slide16

Thinking about your Essay

Brainstorm for 10 minutes about your essay, and what you plan to write about

What is your topic?

What outside sources are you thinking about including as a connection/outside example?

Write a Tentative Thesis

: What is your focusing idea/main point?

In other words: what are you trying to say about

how

your identity was impacted by

education,

by reading, and writing,

etc

---

or--- how education and identity are related? Slide17

Think, Pair, Share

Now that you have done some brainstorming, find a partner.

“Interview” each other about your essays

Ask your partner what their focusing idea/main point is

Ask your partner what narrative elements (personal experience) they might include

Help each other brainstorm even more ideas.

Write down the ideas you have for your essay so you can remember them later!Slide18

Peer Review next Tuesday, September 27!

Rough Draft Due

Required

:

Bring

3

printed

copies

of your rough draft to class for peer review.

 

Optional:

Email me a copy

of your Rough Draft

by 11:59pm on September 27

for my

comments. This is not for points, but rather only if you would like feedback from me on your rough draft

. I will try my best to get you some feedback by th

e end of the day on Saturday October 1

st

.