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This week you will expand on the proposal you submitted in Week One by creating
This week you will expand on the proposal you submitted in Week One by creating a paragraph outline. Using your Week One outline as a guide you will write (and revise) the following areas (see below). The extended outline is an opportunity to build on the work you began in Week One. It can be further extended into a draft. Introduction Opening Body paragraphs for each of three sections Conclusion Introduction: The opening paragraph should introduce the topic to the audience. It is a general overview of the argument you will present. The introduction explains the focus of the paper, presents relevant background, and defines any terms or concepts that may be unfamiliar to readers. The introduction is a pact with the reader; it foreshadows what is to come. In an extended essay, the introduction may be more than a single paragraph. For this outline you must include at least one paragraph, but you may include more than one if you choose. Be sure your thesis statement is clearly placed at the end of the introduction. Do not announce what you will do (Example, avoid: “In this paper, I will….”) Maintain third person point of view. Three Body Paragraphs (opening of each area of focus): Your thesis statement should contain three main points/supporting claims. You will now write a paragraph that introduces each of these supporting points. Each paragraph should begin with a topic sentence that introduce the point to be explored in this section. The paragraph should contain evidence (source material) that supports the main idea. Following the evidence (a quote, summary or paraphrase cited accurately in APA 7th edition), you should explain and expand on the information. Summarize, analyze and explain the source material you use rather than merely reporting it. Conclusion: The conclusion should convey a sense of completeness and closure, it should leave an impression on your readers after they have finished the essay. The conclusion should restate the thesis statement, remind the readers of the main claims that support your argument, and emphasize a major point or piece of evidence. The conclusion is not a mere summary of the essay, it should add perspective and end on important point. The conclusion should not introduce new information’ it should add the the overall understanding of the topic and your argument. As the outline is one step in the process, it is likely the conclusion may change, but revisiting the main points and considering your conclusion here will help focus the essay.
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