personification
introduction
conclusion
rhetorical
elaborate
character
hyperbole
cohesion
evidence
metaphor
language
appeals
analogy
thesis
pathos
simile
idiom
topic
triad
ethos
logos
link
teel
quotation marks
topic sentence
introduction
direct quote
conclusion
main point
paraphrase
secondary
paragraph
details
primary
outline
summary
source
genre
quote
skim
Introduction
Hook
Thesis
Transition word
Evidence
Elaboration
Body paragraph
Conclusion
Topic
Point
Opinion
Informative
Conventions
Score
120 minutes
4;4;2
Plan
Indent
Quotation marks
Capital letter
Punctuation mark
sources or articles
Prompt
Read article
Write
introduction
elaboration
informative
paraphrase
conclusion
capitalize
paragraphs
underline
sentences
punctuate
articles
evidence
spelling
organize
sources
details
passage
opinion
review
circle
indent
unlock
prompt
think
focus
essay
topic
edit
text
body
plan
task
type
box
descriptive outlines
rhetorical elements
quotation sandwich
logical fallacies
rhetorical moves
Thesis Statement
body paragraphs
paraphrasing
Abe Lincoln
conclusion
quotations
McGonigal
Narrative
reasoning
semicolon
SOAPStone
argument
evidence
diction
opinion
writing
pathos
Turkle
claim
ethos
logos
fact
counterargument
argumentative
brainstorming
introduction
proofreading
descriptive
explanation
informative
punctuation
conclusion
persuasive
prewriting
indention
narrative
outlining
paragraph
evidence
organize
revising
sentence
thinking
process
support
writing
format
thesis
draft
essay
ideas
topic
body
hook
plan
incomplete sentence/ lacking a complete subject or predicate
double quotation marks around the first speakers words
a punctuation mark indicating a pause between parts of a sentence
it is used to create a paper trail that the reader can follow to locate the sources you are writing about.
misplaced words in a sentence or words that almost always distort the intended meaning
These strengthen or emphasize the importance of a word or phrase in a sentence
usually the name of a book or short story. Usually written in all caps or italicized
a sentence usually containing two or more clauses not connected by the correct conjunction or punctuation
this happens when the writer shifts from one person to the next without any reason.
this happens when the writer shifts from one tense to another without any reason. (Past tense – present tense)
supporting details
5 paragraph essay
thesis statement
run on sentences
transition words
body paragraphs
topic sentence
Chicago Notes
counter claim
peer editing
introduction
bibliography
works cited
restatement
conclusion
proofread
character
big idea
citation
conflict
summary
heading
setting
quotes
theme
essay
plot
hook
MLA
APA
This sentence introduces your three main ideas (claim+reason)
This is the first sentence of each body paragraph. It introduces the main idea for the paragraph.
This sentence is the attention grabber.
In this paragraph you restate your thesis.
This is the final sentence of each body paragraph.
Your supporting _________________ helps support your main reasons.
A _____________________ essay attempts to convince the reader of something.
How many paragraphs make up this essay?
The introduction paragraph should include some _______________ information.
A five paragraph essay has at least ___________ main reasons.
Paragraph that introduces the reason that your claim is valid
The position that you are trying to get your reader to accept
Challenging the argument by addressing the position of someone who may not agree with the argument
Last paragraph that restates the thesis statement
Facts that support your claim
words that show the relationships among the ideas in a piece of writing
Paragraph that introduces the second reason that your claim is valid
Also known as claim for Informative Essays
The first sentence in each paragraph that tells you what the paragraph is talking about
Demonstrating why the counterargument is wrong
making a claim supporting it using feelings
Paragraph that introduces an opposing claim
First paragraph where you will hook the reader
making a claim supporting it with evidence
Who will be affected by the topic. Who will read the essay.