From Inquiry to Academic Writing, Chapter 6, "From Formulating to Developing a Thesis"
definitive thesis
your revised and refined thesis at which you arrive later in the writing process
never do this
accept your working thesis as your final position
relevance
addressing this helps readers understand how or why your issue is (or should be) important to them
currency (not money)
addressing this helps readers understand how or why your issue is timely (i.e. it matters right now)
introductory section
an area in an essay that lays out the thesis and the context supporting the thesis (which can indeed be more than one paragraph long)
context
an important part of a thesis which established the necessary background information for the thesis along with exploring the situation that has generated the issue or problem that the thesis is addressing
length of thesis statements
can go beyond just one sentence
thesis statement
early on in the writing, this makes explicit the writer's logical stance on the issue that is the subject of the writing
thesis
encompasses all of the information writers use to support their position
modifying-what-others-have-said model
useful for building upon the claims of others to further refine or expand them
hypothesis-testing model
useful for exploring a set of evidence that may lead to a variety of possible answers
filling-the-gap model
useful for pointing out what other writers may have overlooked or ignored in discussing an issue
correcting-misinterpretations model
useful in identifying arguments that you believe have misconstrued one or more important aspects of an issue
working thesis
your first attempt at an assertion of your position