Good Introductions:
- Grab the reader’s attention: beginning with a question (no rhetorical, common questions), beginning with a quote, beginning with a fascinating statistic
- Gives an overview of your topic/argument: background information and history, avoid definitions, lay out issues (major points of agreement and disagreement)
- State your position/thesis: thesis could be 2-3 sentences, thesis must be topic and comment about that topic
- Set up for next paragraph: roadmap for the paper
- Establish your audience
- Answer the question “So What?”
Good Conclusions:
- Recap earlier points of argument: Finally…, In addition…
- Call to action
- Implications of your argument
- Areas for future study, what remains to be examined or done
- Re-evaluation in hindsight with new perspective