Topic Sentences Duane Theobald [email protected].

15
Topic Sentences Duane Theobald [email protected]

Transcript of Topic Sentences Duane Theobald [email protected].

Page 1: Topic Sentences Duane Theobald dtheobal@westga.edu.

Topic SentencesDuane [email protected]

Page 2: Topic Sentences Duane Theobald dtheobal@westga.edu.

Topic Sentences???

•What do you already know about topic sentences?

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Topic Sentences: The Basics

•A topic sentence serves to organize an entire paragraph, and you need to make sure to include one in most of your major paragraphs.

•Two directions: ▫Relates the paragraph to the essay’s thesis

& acts as a signpost/marker for the argument of the paper

▫Defines the scope of the paragraph itself

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What makes a good topic sentence?

• Good topic sentences can improve an essay’s readability and organization, and they meet the following criteria: ▫ A topic sentence is usually the first sentence of the

paragraph, not the last sentence of the previous paragraph.

▫ Topic sentences use keywords or phrases from the thesis to indicate which part of the thesis will be discussed.

▫ Topic sentences tell the reader what concept will be discussed and provide an introduction to the paragraph.

▫ Topic sentences should point back to the subject/main idea presented within the thesis statement.

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Good Topic Sentences (cont’d)• Good topic sentences also include:

▫ Topic sentences may also signal to the reader where the essay has been and where it is headed through the use of certain words such as “first,” “second,” or “finally.”

▫ Topic sentences may act as a mini thesis statement, essentially saying that “This is my claim, or point I will prove in the following paragraph. All the sentences that follow this topic sentence must relate to it in some way.”

▫ Topic sentences should make a point and give reasons or examples to support it.

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Good Topic Sentences Do Not Include:

• A quotation from the critic or from the text you’re discussing.

• A piece of information that tells the reader something more about the plot of the text you’re studying.▫Weak “narrative” topic sentence▫Stronger “topic-based” topic sentence

• A sentence that explains your response or reaction to the work, or that describes why you’re talking about a particular part of it.▫Weak “reaction” topic sentence▫Stronger “topic-based” topic sentence

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Topic Sentences: Not Always Needed?

•Although most paragraphs should have a topic sentence, there are a few situations in which a paragraph might not need a topic sentence. These situations may include:▫Having a paragraph that narrates a series of

events▫Having a paragraph that develops an idea you

introduced (with a topic sentence) in the previous paragraph

▫Having a paragraph where ALL the sentences in the paragraph clearly refer to a main point

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Let’s Practice Together!!• Let’s develop a topic sentence based on the

following paragraph:▫During the 1990s, I really enjoyed watching Friends

on television every Thursday night. I really wanted Rachel’s haircut—I think every girl wanted Rachel’s haircut back then! Rachel’s haircut went really well with the Guess Jeans that were so popular in the 1990s. I remember all the advertisements for Guess and Calvin Klein Jeans that were in each month’s Sassy magazine. I don’t think Sassy magazine exists anymore, but it was one of the most popular magazines for young women in the 1990s.

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What did you come up with?• Thinking about the 1990s brings back a lot of

memories for me about fashion and popular culture. During the 1990s, I really enjoyed watching Friends on television every Thursday night. I really wanted Rachel’s haircut—I think every girl wanted Rachel’s haircut back then! Rachel’s haircut went really well with the Guess Jeans that were so popular in the 1990s. I remember all the advertisements for Guess and Calvin Klein Jeans that were in each month’s Sassy magazine. I don’t think Sassy magazine exists anymore, but it was one of the most popular magazines for young women in the 1990s.

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Topic Sentences: On Your Own!• Look at pages 4-6. Read

each paragraph and select the topic sentence that will correspond with each paragraph. Make sure to consider the specific points we have discussed previously!

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What did you choose?1. Answer is… C!: This idea threads through the paragraph. It is expressed in the third sentence, which tells readers how shaky the evidence for the effect of Mozart’s music on IQ.

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What did you choose?2. Answer is…B!: After this sentence is introduced, the other sentences describe the many deaths that resulted in climbing up Mt. Everest. This sentence sums up the paragraph as a topic sentence is supposed to.

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What did you choose?3. Answer is…C!: Introduced by a transitional sentence, this is the point that gets the most development in the paragraph. The author offers 2 specific examples, and the examples illustrate how blogs have increased the public’s access to information.

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Questions?

•Remember that the UWC is always here to help you!▫678-839-6513▫[email protected]▫TLC 1201 (First floor, past the snacks)▫www.westga.edu/writing ▫Like us on Facebook: University Writing

Center (UWG)

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Questions?

•Duane Theobald (Manager)•678-839-5312•[email protected]