Introduction Paragraph
- Hook — This is where you catch the Reader’s attention. It is not necessary, but it is a good writing technique to practice.
- Summary of the texts — A summary is no more than two or three sentences for each of the main texts that will be used as support in the essay. A summary introduces the title, author, and general subject of the text.
- Thesis statement — The Question + Your Opinion on the topic. Remember that the thesis statement will *answer* the question and therefore should partially restate the question as a statement.
Body Paragraph Structure
- Topic Sentence — Remember that this topic sentence points the reader back towards the thesis statement.
- Quotation from a Text — Which phrase or sentence best supports the point you are making in this particular paragraph?
- announce the quotation — Example: In “Allegory of the Cave” Plato writes that “…” (#).
- quote directly from the text — The quotation is the part that should be where the ellipses are in the example right above this in part a.
- “In other words…” — What does the quotation mean? In other words, Plato is trying to convince his readers that … .
- Connect the quotation’s point to a source outside of the Reading (like the other required reading or a secondary source) — This need only be two or three additional sentences. Making connections shows a higher degree of understanding of how the texts interact with each other to provide support for the essay’s thesis/topic.
Conclusion Paragraph Structure
- Conclusions are short — four or five sentences.
- Conclusions tell the Reader what they should do or think about now that they know more about this essay’s topic.
- The very last sentence should point back to the Hook (if you have a Hook).
Use evidence from allegory of the cave and for each body paragraph and explain detail make
Threee body paragraphs one intro, one summary