1 / 12

How to Write Your Introduction Paragraph

How to Write Your Introduction Paragraph. Introduction Paragraph = Tornado . This is your attention grabber . “ Holy Crap! Look at the crazy cloud!” This is your brief explanation of what you will be talking about or, in this case, what is going on .

kat
Download Presentation

How to Write Your Introduction Paragraph

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How to Write Your Introduction Paragraph

  2. Introduction Paragraph = Tornado This is your attention grabber. “Holy Crap! Look at the crazy cloud!” This is your brief explanation of what you will be talking about or, in this case, what is going on. “There’s a weird funnel that looks like a tornado.” This is your thesis, where you hit your point home. “Yup, that’s a tornado alright.”

  3. The 3 Steps to Writing Your Introduction Step 1: Grab you readers attention with a general statement about your topic. This is the HOOK. Step 2: Briefly explain in 2‐5 sentences what the essay will be about by providing relevant background information. Step 3: End your introduction with a strong thesis statement that tells your reader what you intend to prove to him or her about your topic.

  4. Step 1: Hook Your Reader Grab your reader’s attention with a general statement about the topic. Remember you have 3 ways to do this: 1. Dialogue 2. Vivid Description 3. Interesting Fact You want your reader to look like this

  5. Step 2: Explain What You Are Talking About • Briefly explain in 2-5 sentences what the essay will be

  6. Step 3: Write Your Thesis Statement You’ve already done this!!

  7. Things to AVOID You should avoid using statements like, “This essay will discuss…” or “I’m going to write about…”. AVOID statements that are too broad, too specific, or to vague.

  8. Model Introduction Paragraph Smoking‐related diseases cause an estimated 440,000 American deaths each year. Even with facts like these, the whole country is divided on this issue. Some people believe that smoking should be banned everywhere while others are not so harsh. However, tobacco should be outlawed because smoking endangers everyone’s health, pollutes the environment, and drains us of valuable energy. Hook (Interesting Fact) Brief Explanation (Leads into thesis) Thesis (What you will be proving)

  9. Another Model Introduction Paragraph Have you ever noticed that Athens is a popular name for cities? All cities that are named Athens are named after the Greek goddess Athena. The daughter of Zeus, Athena is the goddess of wisdom, just wars, and architecture. She is the best all-around Greek mythology character because she is very wise, a great tactician, and she only helps fight justified wars. Hook (Thought-provokingquestion) Brief Explanation (Leads into thesis) Thesis (What you will be proving)

  10. Another Model Introduction Paragraph Imagine the jungle surrounds you and one of the most talented hunters in the world is pursuing you; would you stand your ground? In Richard Connell’s short story “The Most Dangerous Game,” that is exactly what Rainsford does. Stranded on Ship trap Island, Rainsford must play hunter General Zaroff’s game, where Zaroff tries to hunt Rainsford down like an animal. Rainsford is one of the bravest characters in literature because he is not easily frightened, he jumps into the sea, and he defeats Zaroff by outsmarting him. Hook (Vivid Description/Thought-provoking question) Brief Explanation (Leads into thesis) Thesis (What you will be proving)

  11. The “Mini-Skirt Rule” BE CONCISE For many of you, your essays are more comparable to an ‘elderly, overweight man in a Speedo’–your essays are way too short, don’t cover much at all, and some are just sad and pathetic.

  12. Confused? Ask questions!

More Related