English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I'm writing an essay for school, and my teacher said that I don't have to follow the 5-paragraph model. I have an introduction for my first paragraph, and for my second one I sort of have a more in-depth look into the introduction. Then I have 2 body paragraphs, and then a conclusion. Does that sound okay?

2007-10-07 15:09:11 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Homework Help

3 answers

No, it doesn't. What you teacher wants is an essay that is more in-depth and longer. Use the general "thesis statement" that you use in the 5-paragraph essay to introduce the paper. Then use point-headings to introduce each section. Each point heading should itself be a thesis statement about that section of the essay. An example would be an essay about the Bill of Rights. Your thesis statement would introduce the Bill of Rights itself. Then each point heading could be a thesis statement about each separate amendment, followed by a section on that amendment alone.

2007-10-07 15:15:07 · answer #1 · answered by cyanne2ak 7 · 2 0

Yes! You are fine! However you have followed a five paragraph format. Just do something different. Remember, your thesis statement doesn't have to be your first statement, as long as it's in the first paragraph. Maybe you want to try using your thesis statement as the last sentence of the first paragraph, or somewhere in the middle. The format isn't so structured, so have some fun. Inject a little of your own personality, and don't worry so much about how ordered the facts are as long as they still lead to a clinching conclusion.

2007-10-07 15:18:55 · answer #2 · answered by klnichollsrn 2 · 0 0

a million. you are able to desire to dig up a solved crime and practice how DNA suits solved it. 2. what's a spectroscope and how do particular human beings (i.e., gemologists) use them to locate actual gemstones? 3. What are you able to do for a dogs with mange? 4. What did Einstein along with his Nobel Prize for? (hint: It became into curiously no longer the belief of Relativity.)

2016-10-10 12:23:04 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers