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D.E.F.E.N.D.S

D.E.F.E.N.D.S. Seven letters, seven points. D.

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D.E.F.E.N.D.S

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  1. D.E.F.E.N.D.S Seven letters, seven points.

  2. D • Decide your exact position. What is it that you want to say? Don't be too broad. That turns readers off. A broad position usually transmits the hidden message that you are trying to please everyone and be all things to all people instead of making a definite statement. 

  3. E • Examine the reasons for your position. Do you truly believe in what you are saying? 

  4. F • Form a list of facts and examples that supports your position. Research. Interview. Read. Then put it in your own words.

  5. E • Expose your opinion in the first sentence. Clinch the reader's attention with a dynamite, to-the-point opening sentence. You've lost most people after the first paragraph if you don't.

  6. N • Note reasons and supporting facts. Don't tell your readers to think a certain way without telling them why. After all, why should they believe you?

  7. D • Drive home your position in the last sentence. Sum it all up. Even if your reader doesn't agree with you, you want to leave him pondering your point of view. If nothing else, you want your article to gain the reader's respect by showing that you did the research and had facts to support your opinion.

  8. S • Search for errors and correct them. Poor packaging makes the best material appear at its worst.

  9. A role model is a person you look up to. Before you begin writing, think about someone you look up to. Why do you admire this person? Write a composition in which you explain to your classmates whom you admire and why you admire this person.

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