Parts of an Essay Terms
The thesis and the restatement of the thesis are written in the following placed in the essay
The thesis is the last sentence in the introduction paragraph; The restatement of the thesis is the first sentence in the conclusion paragraph.
The following things should be in the conclusion paragraph
a conclusion paragraph transition (To sum it up, / In summary / All in all,); a restatement of the thesis; summary sentences of the body paragraphs; a wrap-up sentence
The wrap-up sentence should give the reader
a sense that the essay is complete and, preferably, tie back to the hook.
The type of essay that uses an opposing claim is
an argumentative essay.
A reference citation shows
any information available about the resource being quoted or paraphrases: the author, publication (book, article, website, etc.), page, and line numbers.
The "Background Information" between the hook and the thesis statement should
give the reader some general background information about the topic of your essay without getting into information that will be in your thesis or your body paragraphs.
After the restatement of the thesis, there should be
one sentence (for each body paragraph) that summarizes the body paragraphs. The only exception to this is if the essay has an opposing claim paragraph because any point that goes against the thesis will only serve to weaken the conclusion paragraph.
A restatement of the thesis should
repeat the thesis in a different way (either by using different synonyms of some of the words and/or using a different sentence structure).
hook
should be the first sentence of the essay that is very general and grabs the reader's attention
The rest of the opposing claim paragraph
should disprove or lessen the importance of the conflicting opinion, which should strengthen the opinion of the thesis/claim of the whole essay.
A good thesis statement does the following
states the main idea of the entire essay; is understandable, clear, and not too wordy; lists the two or three supporting ideas that become the body paragraphs (as long as adding them does not make the sentence to wordy)
The main difference between an argumentative thesis/claim and in informational thesis is
the argumentative thesis/claim is an opinion and the information thesis is based on provable facts.
Transitional words and phrases let the reader know
the direction the author is taking them
An opposing claim is
the main idea of a paragraph that conflicts with the opinion of the thesis/claim of the whole essay.
thesis
the most important part of the essay
The following are examples of citations references
George Orwell, Animal Farm, Chapter 7, page 45-47; Robert Frost, "The Road Not Taken," line 17
Some examples an opposing claim paragraph transition are
However, / On the other hand, (notice: commas separate the transitional word or phrase from the rest of the sentence)
